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Vinnie Jones Rightfully Craps All Over Juggernaut Role In ‘X-Men: The Last Stand’

While we look at the fallen state of the once-vaunted X-Men franchise and wonder what went wrong, the truth is it was once in far worse shape. The first two movies were wildly successful, in particular X-2 which is still a critical favorite, but X-Men: The Last Stand continues to be a joke to this day. With Brett Ratner of all people directing, a cast of thousands, and a broken adaptation of Chris Claremont’s classic Dark Phoenix Saga, there are no shortage of things that went wrong. But the one thing that almost everybody remembers as the biggest fail of all? Vinnie Jones as the Juggernaut.

Juggernaut aka Cain Marko, was recently seen in Deadpool 2 and while that version still holds much to be desired, the version played by Jones in The Last Stand is way worse. He barely has anything to do, despite being one of their greatest and most powerful adversaries, his costume looks absurd, and he has an English accent which is just…wrong. The one thing he’s remembered for is the now-classic “I’m the Juggernaut, bitch!”, a line that came absolutely out of fucking nowhere.

Looking back in an interview with CBM, Jones admits the role was shit, and not at all what he signed up for…

“I loved the role, but hopefully you can put it fucking right here, mate. I basically got mugged off. Matthew Vaughn signed me up, and it was a great role and a great script, and Juggernaut was a great character. I signed up for three of them, and that will show you how serious I was about it. Brett Ratner basically dissolved the character. I was in my fucking trailer half the time. It’s one of the most disappointing jobs I’ve been on as far as, you know, ‘What am I doing here?’”

After Bryan Singer left the franchise to direct Superman Returns, Jones’ friend Matthew Vaughan was slated to take over. It was at that point Jones signed on for the long-term role. Vaughan didn’t stick around long, though, and Ratner was brought in we know that turned out badly. Vaughan did eventually come back a few years later for X-Men: First Class, but the damage caused by Ratner set the X-Men back a great deal.

Jones continued, “It wasn’t the same Juggernaut as I signed on for. They took his storyline away, they’d taken his character away, his dialogue. I had two big meetings with Brett about it, and he said, ‘Yeah, yeah, it’s coming. They’re writing stuff for you as we speak’ and it never fucking happened. Disappointment wise, that was probably one of the biggest. What’s upsetting is some of the fans blame me! It was fucking nothing to do with me! That role, I didn’t sign up for. The Juggernaut you saw was not the Juggernaut I signed on for with Matthew Vaughn, I’ll tell you that now. It upset me.”

Jones definitely shouldn’t be blamed for Juggernaut sucking so badly, but he’s not completely off the hook, either.

Brendan Gleeson Is Donald Trump In First Look At Showtime’s ‘The Comey Rule’

James Comey. If you know who the towering former FBI Director is, you either love him or hate him. There’s very little middle ground when it comes to Comey, as Democrats hate him for going public with an investigation into Hillary Clinton during the 2016 Presidential campaign, while keeping quiet on a much-worse investigation into Donald Trump’s ties to Russia. At the same time, he stood up to “President” Trump and got fired for it. The chaos he saw in the White House is all part of Billy Ray’s upcoming Showtime miniseries, The  Comey Rule, featuring Brendan Gleeson as Trump.

Vanity Fair has dropped a first-look at The Comey Rule, highlighted by Gleeson as the current occupant of the White House. Jeff Daniels plays James Comey, who is portrayed as a by-the-book FBI Director who gets on Trump’s bad side by investigating Russian interference in the 2016 election. The two-part series is based on Comey’s book, A Higher Loyalty.

Also seen in the newly-released images are Holly Hunter as former acting Attorney General Sally Yates, Michael Kelly as Andrew McCabe, and Kingsley Ben-Adir as President Barack Obama. Others in the cast include  Jennifer Ehle as Patrice Comey, Peter Coyote as Robert Mueller, Oona Chaplin as Lisa Page, Scoot McNairy as Rod Rosenstein, Steven Pasquale as Peter Strzok, Bill Sadler as Michael Flynn, Jonathan Banks as James Clapper, and so many more.

If you recognize those names, you know this is going to be pretty incendiary, and I can’t wait. Writer/director Billy Ray has never been known to shy away from real-life hot button subjects, as seen in his films Shattered Glass, Richard Jewell, Breach, and Captain Phillips.

The Comey Rule hits Showtime for two-nights beginning September 27th.

 

 

Disney+ Picks Up New ‘Black Beauty’ Film With Mackenzie Foy And Kate Winslet

The classic story of Black Beauty is galloping to Disney+. A modernization of Anna Sewell’s 1877 novel, the film stars Mackenzie Foy and Kate Winslet in the story of wild horse which forges a bond with a grieving girl.

Disney has acquired the rights to Black Beauty, and will add it to their expanding slate of family-friendly features. The already-completed film was written and directed by Ashley Avis (Deserted), and features Winslet as the voice of Black Beauty, a wild stallion who is captured by humans and forges a bond with grieving teen, Jo Green, played by Foy.  The cast includes Claire Forlani, Iain Glen, and Fern Deacon.

Foy is well-known to Disney as star of their big-budget The Nutcracker and the Four Realms, one of the rare live-action remakes that failed to do much at the box office. Winslet is an Oscar winner who has been doing a lot of voicework lately, voicing roles in Mary and the Witch’s Flower and Birds of a Feather. She has a role in James Cameron’s Avatar sequels coming up, as well as the long-awaited drama Ammonite.

Black Beauty arrives on Disney+ later this year.

SYNOPSIS: Black Beauty is a wild mustang born free in the American west. When she is captured and taken away from family, her story intertwines with that of 17-year old Jo Green, similarly grieving over the loss of her parents. The two slowly develop a bond that is built on love, respect and mutual healing.

Catch The First Look At Lili Reinhart And Austin Abrams in ‘Chemical Hearts’ Trailer And Clip

Austin Abrams and Lili Reinhart have just been sent to the principal’s office in a new first look for Amazon Prime’s Chemical Hearts. In the clip, Abrams walks into the school’s office and shares an intense stare with Reinhart, before being called into an administrator’s office, Lili leading the way on crutches. The film is an adaptation of Krystal Sutherland’s 2016 young adult novel Our Chemical Hearts. A trailer has also been released which expands on the coming-of-age story.

The film’s official synopsis is as follows:

Seventeen-year-old Henry Page (Austin Abrams) has never been in love. He fancies himself a romantic, but the kind of once-in-a-lifetime love he’s been hoping for just hasn’t happened yet. Then, on the first day of senior year, he meets transfer student Grace Town (Lili Reinhart) and it seems all that is about to change. When Grace and Henry are chosen to co-edit the school paper, he is immediately drawn to the mysterious newcomer. As he learns the heartbreaking secret that has changed her life, he finds himself falling in love with her — or at least the person he thinks she is.

Reinhart is best known for her role as Betty Cooper in the CW’s teen drama Riverdale. Last year she also starred in Hustlers as one of Jennifer Lopez’s accomplices. Abrams is no stranger to the teen drama genre having supporting roles in Paper Towns, Euphoria, and Dude. He has been on the rise for a while, playing roles in Scary Stories To Tell In The Dark, The Americans, This is Us, Silicon Valley and Brad’s Status. Together they appeared in 2013’s coming of age film and Sundance darling The Kings of Summer. 

I’m curious to see how this stacks up compared to many of the other teen romances that seem to be coming out soon including Words on Bathroom Walls and Endless. I didn’t watch Riverdale past the first season but enjoyed Hustlers a great deal. This time last year I was devouring HBO’s Euphoria and was obsessed with Abram’s storyline with the sexy and plus-sized Kat. We will see how their chemistry and relationship fares on Amazon Prime August 21st.

Check out the clip below.

 

‘Invasion’: Riz Ahmed And Octavia Spencer Join Sci-Fi Thriller From ‘Beast’ Director

Michael Pearce’s 2017 film Beast not only set him as a director to watch, he also helped launch the acting career of Jessie Buckley. For his followup, sci-fi thriller Invasion, Pearce is moving up and casting a pair of award winners, Riz Ahmed and Octavia Spencer.

Deadline reports Pearce will direct Riz Ahmed and Octavia Spencer in Invasion, a sci-fi thriller picked up by Amazon Studios. Written by Pearce and Joe Barton (The Ritual), the story “follows two young brothers who go on the run with their father, a decorated Marine, who is trying to protect them from an unhuman threat. As the journey takes them in increasingly dangerous and unexpected directions, the boys will need to confront hard truths and leave their childhood behind. Ahmed is playing the Marine while Spencer is a probation officer who helps to bring him home.”

Ahmed won an Emmy for his lead performance in HBO’s The Night Of. He has another film for Amazon, Sound of Metal, which is opening later this year. Spencer is an Oscar-winner who earned her first Emmy nomination yesterday for Self-Made: Inspired By The Life Of Madam CJ Walker.

The plan is for Invasion to shoot later this year.

‘A Girl Missing’ Trailer: Kōji Fukada Returns With A Slow-Burning Kidnapping Thriller

Japanese filmmaker Kōji Fukada may not have the name recognition as some of his native contemporaries, but with films such as Sayonara and Harmonium the accolades he’s earned plenty of accolades. Last year, Fukada returned with A Girl Missing, a slow-burning thriller that reunited him with Harmonium star Mariko Tsutsui, and it’s finally coming to virtual theaters this weekend.

A Girl Missing is written and directed by Fukada, and stars Tsutsui as a caregiver extremely close with the family she works for. But that happiness is disrupted by a kidnapping, and a dangerous secret that must be kept.

The entanglement between rich and poor bears resemblance to Parasite, but Fukada is a director who has always gone his own way, so don’t expect too many similarities beyond surface level. There may also be alternate timelines at play, although the trailer doesn’t give anything away on that.

A Girl Missing hits Virtual Cinemas on July 31st.

SYNOPSIS: In this slow-burning thriller, also scripted by Fukada, Ichiko (Harmonium’s Mariko Tsutsui) works as a home-care nurse to the elderly matriarch of the Oisho family — long enough to feel like part of the family. She’s closest to the eldest sister, Motoko (Mikako Ichikawa), who’s studying to follow in Ichiko’s footsteps. However, their happy routine is disrupted when Motoko’s sister, Saki (Miyu Ogawa), is abducted. The girl is eventually returned, but it’s discovered that her kidnapper was Ichiko’s nephew – a fact that Motoko insists they keep between them. It’s this shared secret that forges an even closer bond between the two, yielding further confessions — some of which may be turned into weapons.

Issa Rae And Jordan Peele Teaming Up For Female Identity Horror ‘Sinkhole’

In HBO’s hit series Insecure, creator/star Issa Rae tackles love and relationships through the lens of an imperfect woman. Rae will take a similar theme and bring it Sinkhole, a film in which she’ll team with Get Out and Us director Jordan Peele and Universal Pictures.

Universal has won a competitive bidding war for Sinkhole, which is based on Leyna Krow’s short story about a young family that moves into their dream home despite the massive sinkhole in the backyard. The sinkhole manages to fix broken things, but how would it work on a person? The film explores themes of female perfection and identity, and contains elements of a grounded psychological sci-fi horror, according to Deadline.

Rae is being eyed to star in the film, which she will produce alongside Jordan Peele’s Monkeypaw label. She’s coming off the eight Emmy nominations secured by Insecure just yesterday.

The combination of genre and social commentary seems like a perfect fit for Rae and Peele. Keep an eye on this one.

Review: ‘Summerland’

Gemma Arterton Leads A Wartime Romance So Light It Belongs In The Clouds

The title Summerland comes from the Norse myth of a heavenly afterlife, in which the souls of lost loved ones linger on. It’s a heartwarming, sweetly-constructed notion that fits with the overall tone of award-winning playwright Jessica Swale’s directorial debut, a wartime love story that features a reunion with actresses Gemma Arterton and Gugu Mbatha-Raw, who starred as the title character of her play, Nell Gwynn. Genuine performances from both lift Swale’s wholesome wartime drama, which despite the setting and tale of forbidden romance is so light it could float away.

Summerland establishes exactly what it’s going to be right from the start. It’s 1975 in the picturesque coastal town of Kent, and writer Alice Lamb (Penelope Wilton) is banging away at her keyboard and screaming at the neighborhood children. It’s established very early on that Alice does not like kids, so when time rewinds a few decades and we see that she didn’t like them even then, it’s clear this will be a movie built on explaining why she’s such a curmudgeon. Arterton plays the younger Alice, who spends her tie writing on mythology and folklore, in particular, an “island in the sky” fata morgana phenomenon which looks like a pillowy castle surrounded by clouds.  The townspeople don’t care much for Alice. The housewives don’t understand why she’s lived in that cottage of hers all by herself, the men seem to have no interest in someone as attractive as her (and she no interest in them), and the kids all think she’s a witch.

There is a war going on, though. The constant threat from the Luftwaffe finds evacuated boy Frank (Lucas Bond) on Alice’s doorstep. A series of comical mishaps have led to her being the boy’s guardian as part of Operation Pied Piper, and the cold steel of emotional armor Alice wears is unlikely to stand up to the child’s innocence and earnest attempts to gain her affection.

Why is Alice so closed off from the rest of the world, at a time when most are clinging to one another for hope? Flashbacks to a happier time reveal the great love that got away, Vera (Mbatha-Raw), who she fell in love with while studying at Oxford. The passion they had for one another was undeniable but sadly not meant to be. At at time when such relationships were frowned upon, Vera also couldn’t give up her dream of being a mother in a “normal” heterosexual family. Poor Alice has nursed a broken heart ever since, until Frank showed up her doorstep and began to stitch the pieces back together.

As the title suggests, Summerland pops with sun-kissed locales and shimmering colors, reflecting the light that has begun to shine in Alice’s soul. The bond she begins to form with Frank amounts to a lot of fluff, a couple of beachside excursions, a bruised knee, and little else. Sadly, this could’ve been a more challenging film than it turned out to be given elements Swale has thrown together. Alice and Vera’s lesbian love is painted as a sugar-coated affair of furtive glances, giggly conversations, and a single kiss, with little actual confrontation on the issue. Given this is also the 1940s there might’ve been some discussion of their interracial romance and the challenge that might bring on top of what they already face.

Reality rarely intrudes on this surreal fantasy, and when it does is usually as a contrivance. War hits Alice and Frank tragically hard at one point, but it only stands to serve up a series of convenient plot devices, leading to a fairy tale ending so easy you might overlook how distasteful it is. Arterton has at this point mastered the art of playing the beautiful British social misfit, whose emotional flaws far outweigh her allure. She reveals Alice’s vulnerability in the face of Frank’s fear and naivete, and it comes through in their awed discussions of the divine wonder. This is a story about Alice and Frank, and so Mbatha-Raw doesn’t get nearly enough time as Vera. She’s more of an idea than anything, with Vera representing what happiness could’ve been like for Alice, and Frank someone who enters life when she needs it most. T

Summerland is a beautiful confection, so light and airy it’s a wonder these characters don’t actually live in their own little slice of Heaven.

 

Parental Heartstrings Are Torn In The Trailer For ‘Still Here’

still here trailer

The trailer for Still Here, the debut film by director Vlad Feier knows what is truly terrifying in this world. It’s not guys in hockey masks or giant man-eating spiders, it’s someone you love disappearing and being completely unable to help them find their way back. I’ll tell you, when I became a dad I thought I would feel different, more adult, I didn’t…but I can tell you one thing I did feel immediately and that is the creeping dread that’s always in my periphery knowing that there are terrible things in this world I have to protect this little thing from. Still Here tells the story of a journalist, played by Johnny Whitworth (who does NOT look 25 years removed from his role in Empire Records), in NYC who decides to help a family who’s daughter has gone missing. From the surface this feels a lot like any other movie of it’s kind, think Gone Baby Gone. If you dig a little deeper though you see what makes it different, it’s not a corrupt community and/or police force, but rather a community and police force that just doesn’t care. I’m not sure why but, in this case, apathy seems worse then malice. It’s not all down notes though, Zazie Beetz plays a character named Keysha and if you ask me seeing her name on a cast list always brings sunshine to a dark day.

 

Still Here is available on VOD and DIgital August 28th, 2020

For more of the latest trailers click here!

Universal And AMC Strike Groundbreaking Deal To Shorten Theatrical Window

The stalemate between theaters and studios over films’ theatrical window has, at least partially, been resolved. AMC Theaters and Universal have struck a groundbreaking multi-year deal that will allow any film under the Universal Pictures or Focus Features banner to have only a 17-day theatrical window before moving to premium VOD platforms. Prior to this, the window had been 90-days.

That this agreement was struck between AMC and Universal is interesting. You may recall theater exhibitors being mighty pissed when Universal released Trolls World Tour directly to VOD. Theater owners banned Universal as a result of that move, along with their decision to break the 90-day window for The Invisible Man, The Hunt, and EMMA.  Well, the two sides have kissed and made up. The deal allows for a Universal film to play exclusively in theaters for three weekends before it can hit PVOD, including AMC Theatres On Demand which may see AMC receive a bigger slice of the revenue split.

This gives Universal a lot of freedom, because they don’t necessarily HAVE to make use of this provision. If a movie is a gigantic smash, they aren’t going to suddenly move it to VOD and miss out on a sweet box office. On the other hand, if a film is a dud they don’t have to wait around long and can focus marketing energies on a PVOD release. AMC gets their cut, which they desperately need right now given the impact of coronavirus, and both sides should be happy.

The writing has been on the wall for something like this for a long time, and now it’ll be interesting to see where the other studios and exhibitors land.