1-20 of 137 articles from 2009 « Prev | Next »
5 November 2009 9:50 AM, PST | Beyond Hollywood | See recent Beyond Hollywood news »
Here’s your first look at a heavily photoshopped teaser poster for the upcoming Josh Harnett post-apocalyptic actioner “Gunslinger”. Yeah, it’s basically a poster for the John Woo videogame “Stranglehold” with Josh Harnett’s face photoshopped over Chow Yun Fat’s, and some gun-toting guys on snowmobiles added in because, apparently, there’s gonna be lots and lots of snowmobiling combat in this movie. Via the boys at Quiet Earth. In 2012 the world economy collapses. In 2014 all first world governments crumble. In 2015 the power and lights go out. 2018, Wisconsin, USA. Communities live in fear, protected by paid gunmen. We cut to Jake (former engineer) now hunting for food to feed his family. He sees smoke in the distance and realises that it is his home. A gang, led by the psychopath Brody, has attacked and murdered his family. Seeking revenge, he enlists his ex-military brother ‘Sev’ (Josh Hartnett) to track and hunt the killers. »
- Nix
29 October 2009 3:49 PM, PDT | Atomic Popcorn | See recent Atomic Popcorn news »
Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller’s Sin City truly felt like a breath of fresh air. It was visceral and fun, and stylistically true to the graphic novel source material in ways that no other adaptation had ever been before.
Then came The Spirit, which sort of put a damper on things. Frank Miller shot himself in the foot in a big way, and so he’s been talking up a sequel to Sin City in order to raise his own spirits, it seems. There have been rumors of the involvement of Johnny Depp, which can mostly be chalked up to fan outcry. However, no big steps toward actually beginning production have been taken.
Things are starting to get a little more concrete, though: producer Stephen L’Heureux says that not only will Sin City 2 start shooting toward the end of next year, but also Frank Miller will follow »
- John Cooper
23 October 2009 9:54 PM, PDT | JustPressPlay.net | See recent JustPressPlay news »
Welcome to the absurd. The Seventh Curse is one of the most unreasonably entertaining B-movies you'll see out of Hong Kong, mainly because it’s so fucking insane. The names involved already promises a bastard of a movie; with a screenplay by low-brow legend Wong Jing (who has written and directed over 100 movies, including the God of Gamblers series and a couple of Jet Li films), and directed by Ngai Kai Lam (the director of cult favorite Riki-Oh: The Story of Ricky).
I stumbled onto The Seventh Curse somewhat by accident many years ago, when I was on a Chow Yun Fat binge. I didn’t even realize who the director was at first; but was then pleasantly surprised, needless to say. This one, I dare say, actually tops Riki-Oh in terms of being completely over-the-top, which anyone who has seen Riki-Oh can tell you, is a feat worthy of the Louvre. »
- Arya Ponto
22 October 2009 1:11 PM, PDT | HeyUGuys.co.uk | See recent HeyUGuys news »
Cirque de Freak: The Vampire’s Assistant is unearthed this week. John C Reilly stars as a vampire who performs at the Cirque Du Freak. He meets a young boy, and agrees to take him on as an apprentice.
The screenplay is written by Brian Helgeland. I recognised the name, so i looked up his filmography. It turns out he has written the screenplay’s of many films, including La Confidential, Conspiracy Theory and Payback, having also directed the latter. And along with the Wachowski brothers (The Matrix), he has a screenplay credit for a personal favourite of mine. So join me as i look back at Sylvester Stallone and Antonio Banderas, as they play Assassins.
I knew nothing of Assassins myself when it was released in 1995. It was only a couple of years later that i spotted it on video, intrigued by this movie i’d never heard of. »
- Barry Steele
22 October 2009 11:32 AM, PDT | Cinematical | See recent Cinematical news »
John Woo's Red Cliff isn't just the most expensive Asian movie ever made, it's also an epic testament to history and actual wars that were waged on both land and sea. In China the film was four hours long and split into two parts, but American audiences are getting a 2.5 hour version that (unfortunately) has a lot trimmed out of it. There are massive battles, martial arts, trickery, and of course, doves. It is a John Woo film, after all. It is also awesome, and enough to make you forget that he directed Paycheck.
Check out the exclusive clip after the jump which features the initiation of the climactic clash between Cao Cao and Zhou Yu's forces. This is just one of three massive battles in the film which is available today on VOD, Amazon, and the Xbox, and will appear in theaters on November 18th. This movie marks »
- Kevin Kelly
22 October 2009 9:31 AM, PDT | Beyond Hollywood | See recent Beyond Hollywood news »
You know what I love about announcements of a new Chinese movie? If they say the movie is coming out in 2010, then by God, chances are it’s coming out in 2010. You won’t get that kind of certainly with a Hollywood project, where a movie usually misses the release date by a couple of years. Anyhoo. Chow Yun Fat joining a period gangster movie? With bullets? Flying bullets to boot? They mind as well call this movie “Chow Yun Fat being Chow Yun Fat”, and that would pretty much sell it. The film in question is “Let the Bullets Fly” from director Jiang Wen (”The Sun Also Rises”). Screen Daily describes Chow’s character as only “a visionary triad leader”, and claims the movie is set in 1920s China, but The Hollywood Reporter says the film is set after the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949. Oh well, »
- Nix
22 October 2009 8:49 AM, PDT | 24framespersecond.net | See recent 24FramesPerSecond news »
Chow Yun Fat's return to respectability took another step in the right direction yesterday when he signed on to play the bad guy in Jiang Wen's action comedy Let The Bullets Fly. Chow will star alongside Ge You (The Banquet, If You Are The One) as a "cruel but visionary" gang leader in the early days after the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, a role that was tailor made for him, according to producer Ma Ke, "It took nine writers half a year to revise the script, which was only just finally settled recently," he said. "We can say Chow's role was tailor-made for him. For example, there were no less than ten options for the ending of the movie. The director and Chow came up with the final version when they were drinking and chatting." »
22 October 2009 8:49 AM, PDT | 24framespersecond.net | See recent 24FramesPerSecond news »
Chow Yun Fat's return to respectability took another step in the right direction yesterday when he signed on to play the bad guy in Jiang Wen's action comedy Let The Bullets Fly. Chow will star alongside Ge You (The Banquet, If You Are The One) as a "cruel but visionary" gang leader in the early days after the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, a role that was tailor made for him, according to producer Ma Ke, "It took nine writers half a year to revise the script, which was only just finally settled recently," he said. "We can say Chow's role was tailor-made for him. For example, there were no less than ten options for the ending of the movie. The director and Chow came up with the final version when they were drinking and chatting." »
21 October 2009 5:30 PM, PDT | cinemablend.com | See recent Cinema Blend news »
It is not uncommon for a film to be held up in pre-production. Whether it is dealing with drop-outs, production costs, or a simple unwillingness to get a script together, many things can hold up a production for months. In the case of Chinese director Jiang Wen's next project, a western/comedy titled Let The Bullets Fly, it took nine rewrites and 10 different endings before the all clear was given on Monday. And now, just two days later, the film has finally locked up its star: Chow Yun-Fat. In the film, according to Variety, Yun-Fat will play alongside Wen, who, in China, is more renowned for his work in front of the camera than behind it (though his most recent work was directing a segment for the anthological New York, I Love You, which was given a limited release last week.) Yun-Fat's career has taken an unfortunate turn in America »
21 October 2009 5:01 PM, PDT | Atomic Popcorn | See recent Atomic Popcorn news »
At 54 years old, the Hong Kong action star of John Woo’s The Killer and Hard-Boiled is still ready to kick some tail. Chow Yun-Fat is following his starring role in Mei Hu’s Confucius with a turn in Jiang Wen’s $18 million picture Let the Bullets Fly.
Slated for a Fall 2010 release, Let the Bullets Fly will co-star Jiang and Yun-Fat, and is described as a “comic Western legend” that “contains elements of a thriller, with suspense and black humor.” I’m all for it, especially with a poster like that one.
According to Variety, the script for the film was just finalized two days ago, after undergoing nine rewrites that altered the ending of the film 10 times. That’s a lot of work to finesse a script that no one has any details on just yet.
However, keep your eye on AtomicPopcorn.net for updates as Jiang Wen »
- John Cooper
21 October 2009 4:05 PM, PDT | JoBlo.com | See recent JoBlo news »
Confucius say: man can only find peace after emptying all six chambers. Chow Yun-Fat is following up his turn as that ancient philosopher with some gunplay in the Hong Kong comedy Western Let The Bullets Fly. With the star of The Killer and Hard Boiled on board, that title alone is enough to merit some excitement. And the title is basically all we have -- not much is known about the story itself, except that the script had to go through numerous rewrites before it met with Chow's... »
- Dave Davis
21 October 2009 12:35 PM, PDT | Monsters and Critics | See recent Monsters and Critics news »
Hong Kong action hero Chow Yun-fat will star in the period Western comedy "Let the Bullets Fly." The film is being directed by Jiang Wen on an $18 million budget.According to Variety, Hong Kong's Emperor Motion Pictures said Chow will co-star alongside Jiang, best known for films such as "Devils on the Doorstep," and the popular Chinese comedian Ge You."Let the Bullets Fly" is currently in production and is scheduled for a fall 2010 release. »
- Adnan Tezer
20 October 2009 9:30 PM, PDT | CinemaSpy | See recent CinemaSpy news »
Here’s some news that should get Hong Kong action movie fans salivating: Chow Yun-Fat, who rose to icon status in late '80s/early '90s, is set to take on a role in the upcoming Let the Bullets Fly.
The movie, which began shooting in September, is a comic Western set during the feudal days of 1920’s China. Actor Ge You, whose work has mostly been in mainland Chinese movies, stars as a conman who tries to buy his way into the government, which brings him into the orbit of Chow’s character. Bandits and warlords are also said to figure into the screenplay. Let the Bullets Fly is directed by Jiang Wen, who last directed the critically-acclaimed The Sun Also Rises (no relation to the Ernest Hemingway novel).
For months, Chow had been rumored in tabloids as joining the film’s cast, but we got the confirmation from Twitch, »
8 October 2009 10:47 AM, PDT | Rope of Silicon | See recent Rope Of Silicon news »
Movieline has posted a few snippets from their interview with Red Cliff director John Woo, whose new film is the first feature length film he has released since 2003's abysmal Paycheck. It's his return to Chinese language films, but as he tells Movieline's Kyle Buchanan, "It doesn't mean I have given up on Hollywood."
Nope, instead he has a pair of films he would like to make, the first being an English-language remake of John-Pierre Melville's outstanding 1967 feature Le Samourai, a film Buchanan says Woo already touched upon so much with his Chow Yun-Fat starrer The Killer, that he has nearly remade the film already. I haven't seen that film, but the idea of someone trying to get Le Samourai remade now seems impossible. Woo says, "I want to make it into a modern film," but the quiet nature of Melville's film simply isn't a feature that can be brought »
- Brad Brevet
1 October 2009 11:14 PM, PDT | Rope of Silicon | See recent Rope Of Silicon news »
Red Cliff is John Woo's first Chinese film since 1992 and it reteams him with star Tony Leung who was with Woo in that final Chinese film and action fan classic Hard Boiled. Of course, it wasn't originally intended to be so, as Leung actually stepped in for Chow Yun-Fat who dropped out of the film only three days into shooting. Yun-Fat said he only received a final script a few days before shooting and was not sure he would do justice to the character, while a China Film Group source said Chow had made "unreasonable demands" exceeding industry standards. Either way Leung was in and strangely enough it was a return to the film for him after originally being cast, and having to drop out due to scheduling difficulties. At that time Leung was replaced by Takeshi Kaneshiro whom you may remember as Jin from House of Flying Daggers. »
- Brad Brevet
24 September 2009 3:00 PM, PDT | JustPressPlay.net | See recent JustPressPlay news »
The DVD cover for Triangle says “Three Masters. One Masterpiece.” Triangle does not in fact live up to the hype its cover hopes to generate, but I understand the desire to make a little-known (to Americans anyway) film’s cover eye-catching. This Hong Kong import did pique my interest with its distinction of bringing together three innovative and influential Hk directors: Tsui Hark (Zu Warriors, Once Upon a Time in China), Ringo Lam (City on Fire, which inspired Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs, the underrated twin Jackie Chan comedy Twin Dragons, and Chow Yun Fat vehicle Full Contact), Johnnie To (Ptu, Election, and Breaking News).
The primary cinematic appeal of Triangle is invested in the collaboration between these three “masters.” Each director takes the reins on one 30-minute section of this 90-minute film. The trio maintains the same editor and cinematography to ensure continuity but bring their own stylistic choices and cinematic flair to their third. »
- Mark Zhuravsky
18 September 2009 10:20 PM, PDT | Fangoria | See recent Fangoria news »
Strike one against my review of Devil May Cry The Animated Series; I don’t play video games. I don’t mean that as a snide aside, but Nintendo was forbidden in my childhood home and besides sinking a few thousand quarters into Spy Hunter at Chuck-e-Cheese (and Gal’S Panic at the boardwalk arcade, shh!) that particular seed of interest never got planted, and thus never grew into habitually kicking back with Call Of Duty.
Strike two: I am a casual animation fan, and not into anime. Once again I have nothing against it, in fact I’m so ignorant of the medium’s signatures that I can’t even submit a stereotypical portrait of anime fans. If I had to guess, replicas of samurai swords hang on their walls and if you were to say to one “I’ve seen Akira, and Miyazaki’s cool,” it’s like »
- no-reply@fangoria.com (Jack Bennett)
8 September 2009 11:02 AM, PDT | FilmJunk | See recent FilmJunk news »
Chow Yun-Fat may be known for his Hong Kong action movies and martial arts skills, but much like his peers Jackie Chan and Jet Li, he has been seizing the opportunity for more dramatic roles as he gets older. And really, you can't get much farther from the action hero stereotypes than to play the Chinese philosopher Confucius in his very own biopic. This movie, titled simply Confucius, is directed by Mei Hu (Times Away from War), and reportedly has a budget somewhere in the range of $20 million -- not much by Hollywood standards, but pretty expensive for a Chinese production. The first trailer has arrived online, and it features no dialogue, choosing instead to showcase three minutes of beautiful imagery set to an epic score. Unfortunately, for those of us unfamiliar with the life of Confucius, it's still not clear what exactly is going on here. I guess there's »
- Sean
6 September 2009 8:24 AM, PDT | GetTheBigPicture.net | See recent Get The Big Picture news »
At first glance, it wasn't a big week for movie trailers. Some of that has to do with not having an Avatar or an Inception to talk about. But another part of it is that we shouldn't judge the recent crop of trailers with one quick glance.
Sure, the new Red Band trailer for the Boondock Saints sequel will definitely move the needle for a lot of folks, but there's the strange and almost desperate first look at Woody Harrelson's Defendor, a sweeping historical epic called Agora with Rachel Weisz, and Chow Yun-Fat in Confucius.
Now, on that last one, I really didn't have a whole lot of interest in even checking it out, but it is simply fantastic. So that's where I'd start with this week's collection if I were you.
Seriously, watch the trailer for Confucius
The heavily armed Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day
Defendor with »
- Colin Boyd
4 September 2009 10:00 AM, PDT | WorstPreviews.com | See recent Worst Previews news »
Chow Yun-Fat's (Pirates of the Caribbean, Dragonball Evolution) upcoming "Confucius" biopic started filming at the end of March in Beijing and we already have a trailer for it. Check it out below. Confucius was a famous Chinese philosopher, who was born Kong Qiu in 551 BC and died in 479 BC. He was the second son of a minor aristocratic family that had fallen from power and as a result, Confucius was orphaned as a child and grew up in relative poverty. A voracious reader, he educated himself, eventually becoming a private tutor for the sons of wealthy gentlemen. Distressed by the division of China into fiercely competitive and often warring states, Confucius, like many other thinkers of his era, devoted much time to pondering ways to restore order to the chaotic world in which he lived. For a decade beginning when he was about 55, Confucius wandered through neighboring states, attempting »
1-20 of 137 articles from 2009 « Prev | Next »
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