Sync Weekly

Posts Tagged ‘Avatar’

Ferrum Vir II

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Iron Man 2

Now with more iron. And a rail gun.

So, obviously the big news at the box office is Iron Man 2, which brought in a cool $133.6 million over the weekend, more or less kicking off the official summer blockbuster season. Unless you count Clash of the Titans as doing that. Or unless you believe it can’t start until Memorial Day. Either way, there are some big names right around the corner: Gladiator 2 Robin Hood May 14, MacGuyver MacGruber and the new Shrek May 21, Sex and the City (2, ostensibly) May 27, and Prince of Persia: Sands of Time May 28. And that’s just this month.

  Both called the Golden Rock, but not the same.

Both golden rocks, but not the same.

Meanwhile this has been a hot week for local film news as well. Of course, there was the announcement of the lineup for the Fourth Annual Little Rock Film Festival last night at the Clinton School of Public Service. Looks like things kick off with Winter’s Bone, directed by Debra Granik. Along with the slate of narrative features, documentaries and shorts, there’s a new competition this year for a $10,000 cash prize, The Best Southern Film Award given by Little Rock’s very own Southern literary and culture magazine, the Oxford American.

Khaaaaan

Order before July 13.

Also kicking off this week were a couple of movie series worth checking out. Over at Market Street Cinema, in conjunction with The Dave Elswick Show on KARN News Radio 102.9FM /920AM, they’re presenting a series of classic films (some more so than others). First up was Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. The remaining schedule looks like this:
June 8: North by Northwest
July 13: Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan (!)
Aug 10: Shane
Sept 14: Top Gun
Oct 12: Friday the 13th
Nov 9: The Godfather
Dec 14: White Christmas

Not coincidentally, all those dates are the second Tuesday of every month. Showtime is 7 p.m.; tickets are $5 each. Children under 12 are admitted for free.

Drive-In

Like this. Except integrated.

For the retro experience, consider heading over to the Arkansas Flag and Banner building on the second and fourth Saturday of each month now through July to check out the Dreamland Drive-In. Complete with cartoon shorts, news reels and a feature-length movie, the experience is designed to take you back. Or, if you’re like me, to see how people lived way back when, before the cineplex. Schedule looks like this:
May 22- Reefer Madness/Sex Madness
June 12- Night of the Living Dead
June 26- The Outlaw
June 10- The Little Princess (family night)
July 24- The Fast and The Furious
Gates open at 7:30pm and the movies will start at sunset. Concessions of beer, soft drinks, hot dogs, and more will be available for purchase. Admission is $20 a car (pile in to save) or $5 person for walk ups. Proceeds go toward the Dreamland Ballroom renovation project, which is an effort to restore and preserve the historic Ninth Street venue.

Bad Hair

The hair is somewhere in the middle.

Lastly, in Netflix news, I gotta say I’ve been slacking. I got Frost/Nixon and Pandorum and have sat on the forever. Besides Avatar and Sherlock Holmes, I hadn’t updated my queue in ages. But for this week I’m thinking Daybreakers and Legion, two flicks I never made it to the theater to see. I know, it’s very angels and demons… and I don’t mean the Dan Brown adaptation where Tom Hanks has that atrocious hair. What I can’t wait for: The Road, which releases May 25.

Release the awesome?

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Rwar.

This is a smile.

Oh my, it has been a while since my last update. Luckily nothing very important has happened in the movie world since then. What? The Oscars? Oh, well, those aren’t really a big deal. And that Avatar film topping the money charts to become the greatest thing since eyeballs learned to see, well, that happens all the time. Wonderland? Whatever, man.
The important news is that my life is complete. As a kid, I was a huge fan of Clash of the Titans. So much so that it may or may not have had anything to do with my majoring in Greek and Roman history in college. So I’m kinda stoked that there’s a remake out there, even if I oppose remakes in general. My case,which I cannot embed for some reason:

The 1981 version

The 2010 version

All nostalgia aside, I really don’t think this is a contest, so I’ll move on.

Freddy

Note: You're screwed.

Another remake reboot, and this time I’m dubious at best. I’ve been a fan of horror movies for as long as I can remember, and Nightmare on Elm Street has always been, in my opinion, among the best franchises out there. Oh sure, It is not without its cheese, but something about the idea of a monster who kills through dreams is utterly terrifying. I mean, sleep is when we’re at our most vulnerable and dreams are entirely beyond our control. Those two factors don’t bode well for anyone targeted by a certain Mr. Krueger.
For the series to be something new, they had to do away with Robert Englund. I understand that. But can it be Nightmare without him? We’ll see come April 30, though it’s got his endorsement:

“I really am looking forward to how they exploit the dreamscape with CGI and all of the new technologies that they have at their fingertips. That is something I think that is appropriate and that’s what I’m looking forward to. But I hope they make it their own. I hope they change it.”
http://www.fearnet.com/news/b15904_exclusive_robert_englund_on_jackie.html

… but not that of franchise creator Wes Craven:

“I don’t even know who’s doing it and I’m not interested. It’s actually really painful to think about it.”
http://movies.ign.com/articles/992/992845p1.html

Craven said he used his entire life savings to make the 1984 original and, after shopping it for 3 years with no response, desperately signed away his rights to make the deal he did, never imaging it would lead to an army of sequels (or remakes, for that matter).
That Michael Bay is associated at all makes me cringe, especially after last year’s reboot stupid and entirely unnecessary travesty that was Friday the 13th – which, of course, reportedly has a sequel coming next year.

Aliens+boats=$$

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Blue is the new green

Blue is the new green

It’s official: Avatar is number two.

No, nothing has bumped it from the top spot on weekly box office returns. Indeed, at $48.5 million for the weekend, it earned nearly three times what second place Sherlock Holmes did ($16.6 million), meaning for the third straight week the top and second spots are unchanged.

But the second place ranking earned by Avatar is instead to be found on the all-time top 5 international box office takes. That’s right, at $1.335 billion, it has passed Lord of the Rings: Return of the King ($1.129) to settle in behind 1997’s mega hit Titanic, which earned $1.842 billion worldwide. That means we have James Cameron to thank for the two movies that have earned more money than any other in the entire history of cinema. King of the World, indeed.

And perhaps his little blue aliens have what it takes to sink the unsinkable big boat. At $429 million in domestic take, Avatar has done nearly twice as well overseas, and its numbers are still climbing.

Then again, come this weekend there will be some new competition in the heavily marketed Denzel Washington doomsday pic The Book of Eli.

The apocalypse ain't got nothin' on me.

The apocalypse ain't got nothin' on me.

As for what will be released tomorrow worth adding to your Netflix, well, it’s slim pickings.

There is the war drama The Hurt Locker, which has won a lot of critical acclaim and will likely be in the race for the Best Picture Oscar.

But more interesting to me is a film I hadn’t seen much buzz about, a psychological sci-fi flick in the vein of 2001: A Space Odyssey called Moon. It’s got Kevin Spacey as the evil computer! Check out the trailer and add if it moves you.

Merry Christmas indeed

Monday, December 28th, 2009
To: Hollywood. From: Us.

To: Hollywood. From: Us.

Man, it seems like only a year and a half ago we were collectively spending $260 million over the weekend at the box office, setting a record for the best three-day take ever.
Oh wait, it was a year and a half ago, the weekend of July 18, 2008, to be exact. The Dark Knight came out, and it was the only weekend we’d ever topped that completely arbitrary $260 million spending number — until this past weekend.
Thanks to strong showings from Avatar, Sherlock Holmes, Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel and It’s Complicated (in that order), our collective spending from Friday-Sunday, Dec. 25-27, was a staggering — and new all-time high — $278 million.

Not the first result I expected from Google imaging “Avatar.”

Not the first result I expected from Google imaging “Avatar.”

Curiously, this is only a month after we very nearly broke the record back in November, spending $258 million on the weekend New Moon came out. But unlike that weekend or the now-topped record set by Dark Knight, the Christmas box office takes weren’t bolstered by one enormously successful film. Whereas New Moon accounted for more than $142 million of it’s near record weekend and Dark Knight was responsible for more than $158 million in its heyday, the highest grossing movie of this Christmas weekend was Avatar at only $75 million. Sherlock turned up $65.4 million and Alvin and his rat friends made $50.2 million, almost guaranteeing this nails-on-a-chalkboard re-imagining will become an unneeded trilogy.

You haven’t seen the last of us (unfortunately).

You haven’t seen the last of us (unfortunately).

So, what does this mean?
Well, first of all, it’s fair to say there’s a lot of movies worth seeing in theaters right now, from Avatar to The Blind Side (omg, still?!). Or, at least, there’s a lot of movies people are paying to see, like the Chipmunk movie. The top 10 biggest grossers account for $259 million, meaning there was another $20 million spent on movies that brought in less than $4.4 individually (which is what #10 Invictus collected).
Second, and perhaps more importantly, it might mean a shift, even if a subtle one at first, in the Hollywood paradigm that says big money only comes in the summer. Prior to this year that was true. The two other biggest box office weekends ever were in July 2006 and May 2007, when the second and third Pirates of the Caribbean movies were released. But this year, we were much more willing to spend in the fall — twice, in fact.
Does that mean the era of the summer blockbuster is dead? Surely not, but don’t be surprised if the notoriously clever marketing folks working for the big studios give us several presents next holiday season… though they’ll probably blow it by making them all Christmas themed.

Can’t wait.

Can’t wait.

As for this week’s DVD releases, I’m most excited about adding 9 and Paranormal Activity to my Netflix queue. Also, Glee Season 1 Volume 1 gets released. I haven’t watched this show, but have heard from several people that it’s quite good. So maybe catching up on video isn’t a bad idea since you can only watch the last 5 episodes on demand.