Review: ‘Cold Prey II’

cold prey 2

It’s nice to see that even foreign filmgoers have to contend with sequel-itis.  2006’s ‘Cold Prey’ (‘Fritt Vilt’) was a fairly standard slasher movie structure-wise.  A group of snowboarders must take refuge in an abandoned hotel.  Killer resident of said hotel takes them out one-by-one.  But there was a style and a level of depth to ‘Cold Prey,’ something that is missing for the majority of its sequel.  ‘Cold Prey II,’ much like its predecessor, is a fairly standard slasher movie, too.  Its setting has changed, there is a little more backstory to the killer involved, the body count is higher, and the characters being picked off are paper thin.  You know, your basic rules of a slasher movie sequel.

Taking a page from ‘Halloween II,’ ‘Cold Prey II’ starts up right where the last film has left off.  Jannicke, once again played by the tough Ingrid Bolso Berdal, has just stabbed the killer with his own pickaxe and dropped him down the deep crevasse where he dumps his victims.  She has been found, taken to a local hospital, and police are investigating.  The bodies of her friends, and that of the killer, are brought to the morgue in the basement of the hospital.  The hospital, as horror conventions would have it, is in its final days, so the crew is thin, and only a few patients are on hand.  You pretty much know where things are going to go.

‘Cold Prey II’ works well for the first half, taking its time in building the tension at the hospital.  Some of the hospital workers have a certain level of story built up around them, as do some of the local policemen who are investigating.  You honestly don’t know where the threat is going to come from.  Will Jannicke go insane and start taking people out?  Will the killer, believed dead, rise up and start in again?  Will another menace come out of the crevasse where a few policemen are still conducting an investigation?  In this, returning screenwriter Thomas Moldestad does a good job baiting his audience and keeping us waiting for the lights to go out and the suspense to kick in.  It’s not until the 30-minute mark that things begin to go awry, but, once they do, it’s pretty nonstop.

Of course, there are issues with Moldestad’s screenplay.  Serious issues.  With ‘Cold Prey,’ he was dealing with a small group of characters who pretty much did everything as you should in real life.  They were just in a situation that was so extraordinary that they couldn’t handle it.  When a killer was stalking them, they bolted themselves into a room, sat, and waited.  With ‘Cold Prey II,’ he has to contend with a much larger cast, and some of the characters are pretty expendable, and even more of them are pretty stupid.

If there’s a killer walking the hallways of your hospital, why don’t you take up a weapon from the conveniently placed trashcan of weapons near the front desk?  Why don’t you hide that trashcan, too, so the killer has a worse off chance of finding them?  If you know there’s something wrong, the lights have gone out, the emergency lights have not kicked in, and you are fully aware there’s a living, breathing killer in your hospital, how about you don’t spend ten minutes working on the generator in the dark basement?  How about you leave the hospital and wait for the cops to come back?  If you’re in a car and the windows are all frozen over, how about you don’t just sit there?  Get out of the car where you can see someone coming from a mile away.

These are just a few of the stupid traits people in horror movies seem to have to display in order for suspense and plot to move forward, and, with ‘Cold Prey,’ Moldestad didn’t have to worry about all of that.  He was dealing with, at most, five characters at any one time.  With ‘Cold Prey II,’ he gets in over his head, and the level of horror movie routine found here is astounding.

First-time director, Mats Stenberg, does a decent job keeping the pace up once the action kicks in.  He and Moldestad work out a nice movement between the ongoing storylines at the hospital and the chief of police who is looking into the background of the hotel and its owners.  That subplot brings up a nice backstory to the killer, one that opens up the doorway for the ‘Cold Prey’ franchise to continue on a la ‘Friday the 13th.’  Stenberg does his best at holding up the style found in Roar Uthaug’s direction from the first, even though it’s never quite to that level.

Leading up to the final act, ‘Cold Prey II’ is hit or miss.  A few moments offer up some nice scares, a nice bit of gore, and a pretty nonstop level of intensity despite how slipshod the characters involved are written.  Unfortunately, the movie completely loses its grip in the third act.  It’s rushed, it’s never intense in any way, and it involves that age-old movie element where someone arrives just in time to save someone else from being killed by the bad guy.  It’s stereotypical of the genre, and there are so many, better ways to work out a situation than resort back to what’s been done time and time again.  The movie ends on a final note, one that you know isn’t going to hold up once ‘Cold Prey III’ decides to get rolling, and it leaves the audience not necessarily wanting more but better.

Unfortunately, foreign films, particularly horror, while still better than most of the trash that is released by American studios, is becoming more and more typical.  Even though it was stylistically top-notch, intelligent (well, more intelligent than the norm, anyway), and suspenseful, ‘Cold Prey’ was still just another slasher movie.  ‘Cold Prey II’ keeps the style and intensity, but it completely jettisons the intelligence.  It ends up being something you trust in foreign filmmakers to avoid completely, entirely average.

‘Pirates 4’ Could Have a Director Attached

pirates of the caribbean

Nothing is official yet, but Variety is reporting that director Rob Marshall is “on the verge” of becoming the director of the fourth entry in the ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ franchise.   Marshall, who got his start as a choreographer for television productions of “Victor/Victoria” and “Annie!,” has helmed ‘Chicago,’ ‘Memoirs of a Geisha,’ and the upcoming musical, ‘Nine.’

Marshall would be filling a spot left open by Gore Verbinski, who directed all three of the preceding ‘Pirates’ movies.   Verbinski left the franchise in April when he decided to turn his attentions towards a feature film adaptation of the video game ‘Bioshock.’   Since then, that film has lost its momentum, and Verbinski has moved on to other projects.

Bruckheimer and Disney have been looking over potential directors for the film in recent weeks.   Bruckheimer hopes to get the film shot before he moves star Johnny Depp over to his long-planned ‘Lone Ranger’ project.   Sources close to the deal claim Marshall’s involvement looks good enough to begin the casting for new characters.

Again, this is not set in stone, but it is looking good that Marshall will be sitting in the director’s chair on this one.

Source: Variety

Two Posters and a Still from Soderbergh’s ‘The Informant’

informant poster header

Matt Damon’s face says it all.   The wonderment coming from this movie is incredible.   It looks downright hilarious, and, believe it or not, could be Soderbergh’s funniest movie to date.   I guess that’s not saying a whole lot when you consider the guy’s previous funniest movie was ‘Che: Part Two.’

Well, today, we have two posters to show you and a still from the movie.   The first poster is the newest of these.   The still and the other poster have been around for a few months, but we haven’t run them yet.

Check ’em out:

informant poster

informant poster 2

The Informant

You gotta wonder, though.   Both posters claim ‘The Informant’ comes out in September, but everything else claims the movie’s release date is October 9th.   These could be early prints that are just now coming out, so the finalized poster that hits theater lobbies will probably be slightly altered.

Source: Yahoo! Movies

Jerry Bruckheimer Declaring ‘World War Robot’

world war robot

Hollywood producer extraordinaire, Jerry Bruckheimer, has grabbed the rights to the graphic novel ‘World War Robot.’   The deal was finalized during last week’s Comic Con in San Diego.

Written and drawn by award-winning designer Ashley Wood, the graphic novel follows a small band of human and robots who do battle on Earth, on the Moon, and even on Mars.   The story is set near the tail-end of the larger war and also includes a bit of dark comedy along with epic battle sequences.

IDW Publishing, the rights owners for ‘World War Robot,’ is also home to the ’30 Days of Night’ comics.   Bruckheimer has a lot of high-profile projects in the pipeline including next year’s ‘Prince of Persia,’ a third ‘National Treasure’ film,   ‘The Lone Ranger,’ and a fourth entry in the ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ franchise.

Source: Variety

Nacho Vigalondo Bringing ‘Gangland’ to America

nacho vigalondo

Nacho Vigalondo is coming to America.  The writer/director of ‘Timecrimes’ is bringing his original idea, ‘Gangland,’ to the states with Pat Healy (“In Treatment”) set to write the screenplay and Vigalondo himself set to direct. Mandate Pictures and Academy Award-winning screenwriter Steven Zaillian will produce.

‘Gangland’ will be a comedy about video game developers who promise to deliver the most realistic game of all time, GANGLAND. The team find themselves in hot water when they find themselves in a real-life gang-land situation.

Says Zaillian:

Nacho’s work in Spain is consistently innovative and energetic. In particular, we’re huge fans of his film, TIMECRIMES, and are excited to have the chance to develop another of his very original ideas with our partners at Mandate.

Film Rites, the venture set up between Mandate and Zaillian, has a first-look deal with Sony Pictures.

Source: Twitch

The Spierig Brothers Want ‘Blood’ in Space

captain-blood

Michael and Peter Spierig, the Australian brothers behind ‘Undead’ and the upcoming ‘Daybreak,’ have set themseves up to next direct ‘Captain Blood’ for Warner Brothers.  They have been hired by WB to direct as well as write a new version of the 1935 classic starring Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland. The Spierigs were chosen, because of their idea to have the new version of the film set in space.

At first, I felt like I was in that scene in ‘The Player,’ where Buck Henry pitches the sequel to ‘The Graduate.’  But when I took a look at their animatic depiction of a pirate battle in space, it had such a distinctive visual look to it that I said, ‘Great, I get it.’

That comes from producer Bill Gerber who is backing the project for WB.  The film will tell roughly the same story as the original, that of a doctor who is wrongfully sentenced to deportation and slavery and the buccaneer he forms allegiance with.

Says Gerber about the plot:

There are some things you don’t mess with, and that is as classic a movie storyline as you will ever find.

Source: Variety

‘The Fantastic Mr. Fox’ Trailer Goes Live

fantastic mr. fox

Wes Anderson’s venture into full-fledged stop-motion filmmaking sure has a lot of stars in it.  George Clooney, Meryl Streep, Cate Blanchett, Bill Murray, Jason Schwartzman, and Own Wilson just to name a few. In fact, it’s a lot of those names that seem to keep ‘The Fantastic Mr. Fox’ from seeming like it’s going to be… well… fantastic.  The star power of the voices involved, particularly Mr. Clooney, seem to betray the quirky fun the film seems like it could be.

You can see for yourself right here:

All-in-all pretty good, but nothing worth a whistle and a click.

‘The Fantastic Mr. Fox’ is set for release on November 13th, 2009.

Source: Yahoo! Movies

A Serious Trailer for ‘A Serious Man’

serious man1

The Coen Brothers just keep churning them out.   I think they’re in competition with Soderbergh and Woody Allen to see who can get the quickest turnaround on their shoots.   Allen’s winning in terms of quantity, but it seems the Coens are winning the battle in the quality department.

Their latest film, ‘A Serious Man,’ has this new trailer released.   It stars Michael Stuhlbarg as a Jewish professor in the Midwest of the late ’60s.   He watches as his life unravels after his wife leaves him, because his annoying brother won’t move out of the house.

Check out the trailer for yourself:

It comes out on October 2nd in limited release.   It also stars Richard Kind and Adam Arkin.   You can expect Soderbergh and Allen to respond with five or six feature films of their own.

Source: Apple

Russell Crowe Set for ‘The Next Three Days’

russell crowe

Russell Crowe will next star in the Paul Haggis-directed drama, ‘The Next Three Days.’  Crowe will be playing a school teacher whose wife is arrested for a murder she claims she did not commit.  The teacher devises a plan to help free her.

The film is based on the 2008 French film ‘Pour Elle,’ which starred Diane Kruger.  Haggis told Daily Variety that he needed an actor in the lead spot who could embody the everyman who rises when faced with extraordinary circumstances.

We’ve seen him as the gladiator, but he has embodied the Everyman in so many pictures.

The deeper theme here is, would you save the woman you loved if you knew that by doing so, you would turn into a man that woman could no longer love?

Haggis plans to begin production in September in Pittsburgh.

Source: Variety

Spielberg Could Be Helming ‘Matt Helm’

matt helm

Variety is reporting that iconic director Steven Spielberg could be moving next to a film based on the novels centering around playboy super spy, Matt Helm. Spielberg is seriously considering directing the film, which was, at one time, set up at DreamWorks before the company and Paramount split. The ‘Matt Helm’ property was left at Paramount, and whether Spielberg wants to direct the film or not, there will be some serious negotiations between the two companies to settle the deal.

Spielberg was so pleased with Paul Attanasio’s (‘Donnie Brasco’ and ‘The Sum of All Fears’) recent rewrite on the project, that he has definitely stepped on as producer.  There is no official word yet on whether he has decided to direct it.

While the four movies based on the 27-novel series by Donal Hamilton were somewhat tongue-in-cheek, Variety is saying Attanasio’s screenplay is closer to the recent ‘Bourne Identity’ spy thrillers.

Hollywood golden boys Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci are also on board as producers.

Source: Variety