This fall, everyone’s favorite leche-loving, swashbuckling, fear-defying feline returns.
For the first time in more than a decade, DreamWorks Animation presents a new adventure in the Shrek universe as daring outlaw Puss in Boots discovers that his passion for peril and disregard for safety have taken their toll. Puss has burned through eight of his nine lives, though he lost count along the way. Getting those lives back will send Puss in Boots on his grandest quest yet.
Academy Award® nominee Antonio Banderas returns as the voice of the notorious PiB as he embarks on an epic journey into the Black Forest to find the mythical Wishing Star and restore his lost lives. But with only one life left, Puss will have to humble himself and ask for help from his former partner and nemesis: the captivating Kitty Soft Paws (Oscar® nominee Salma Hayek).
In their quest, Puss and Kitty will be aided—against their better judgment—by a ratty, chatty, relentlessly cheerful mutt, Perro (Harvey Guillén, What We Do in the Shadows). Together, our trio of heroes will have to stay one step ahead of Goldilocks (Oscar® nominee Florence Pugh, Black Widow) and the Three Bears Crime Family, “Big” Jack Horner (Emmy winner John Mulaney, Big Mouth) and terrifying bounty hunter, The Big Bad Wolf (Wagner Moura, Narcos).
Puss in Boots: The Last Wish features an all-star comedic cast that includes Oscar® winner Olivia Colman, Ray Winstone (Black Widow), Samson Kayo (Sliced), Emmy nominee Anthony Mendez (Jane the Virgin) and Tony nominee Da’Vine Joy Randolph (Trolls World Tour).
The long-awaited follow-up to the 2011 Academy Award®-nominated blockbuster, The Last Wish is directed by Joel Crawford and produced by Mark Swift, the creative team behind DreamWorks Animation’s smash, The Croods: A New Age. The film’s executive producer is Illumination founder and CEO Chris Meledandri.
The character of Puss in Boots first appeared in 2004’s Oscar®-nominated Shrek 2 and instantly became a global, scene-stealing sensation. Puss then co-starred in two other Shrek sequels and his solo film, as well as in multiple DreamWorks Animation videos and TV series. The Shrek and Puss in Boots films have collectively earned more than $3.5 billion worldwide.
Okay, now we’re talking “Summer at the movies”! Yeah, yeah we’ve had the newest entry in a “tentpole franchise” with the mind- (and butt) numbing F9, but this Friday’s big release continues a now 13-year tradition. We’re going back to the multiplex (or a deluxe “single-screen palace” for those lucky few) for a deep dive into the Marvel Cinematic Universe! “Excelsior’, as our much-missed “king of cameos” would say. Oh, and this dive is so “deep’ you may get a bit of whiplash in your reclining theatre seat (or in your “Lazy boy” at home, which is now an option, but go out, please) since it’s a prequel to the film in which we said goodbye to this character, from 2019. But really, after her introduction in 2010s IRON MAN II, and roles in six other MCU epics, she, yes S-H-E, is long, long overdue for a solo showcase (heck, a team-up with her bow-wielding BFF would’ve been nice). And after countless release date changes, it’s finally time for film fans to brace themselves for the sting (or should it be bite) of the BLACK WIDOW! To quote Stan once more, “Face front!”, or you won’t see the screen, ‘natch’ true believers!
The film actually begins a lot further back with a prologue intro, as a fiesty preteen, her electric blue hair shimmering in the late afternoon sun, pedals her bike in suburban Ohio, circa 1995 (hmmm, on the west coast, an aspiring SHIELD agent is encountering a certain Kree-based warrior, so it’s a pivotal time in the MCU). As she joins her blonde kid sister and “mama” (Rachel Weisz), “papa” (David Harbour) bursts through the door to announce that they must quickly pack “for an adventure”. After eluding the authorities, they hop on a plane that lands in Cuba. There they meet daddy’s boss, Dreykov (Ray Winstone), who promptly (well, after getting a prized “floppy disc”) separates the two sobbing sisters. After the main title “history montage”, the story zips ahead to 2016, In the aftermath of CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR, General Thaddeus “Thunderbolt” Ross (William Hurt) believes that he has trapped Natasha Romanoff AKA the Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), who gives him “the slip” and escapes to a secluded trailer “safe house” in Eastern Europe, which is tended by pal and “acquisitions expert” Mason (O-T Fagbenie). Far away, an elite squad of female agents led by now not-so-lil’-sis Yelena (Florence Pugh) tracks down a fugitive woman. She’s fatally injured, but before she expires she plunges a needle into Yelena’s leg. It’s one of a bag full of hypos filled with a glowing red liquid. Later, Mason gives Nat her accumulating mail, which includes a rather large case, which i contains those red needles. On her way to her Prague apartment, she is attacked by an armored high-tech assassin, Taskmaster.. After thwarting that killer, and holding on to the package, Nat is attacked again at her “flat”, this time by Yelena. After their reunion “workout” Yelena tells Nat that the needles contain an antidote to the mind-controlling chemicals used to create the “perfect killer agents’ at the “Red Room” (we saw a glimpse of that “school” that creates “black widows” in AVENGERS: THE AGE OF ULTRON). But Nat is confused since that “program” ended when she “liquidated” its creator, the despicable Dreykov, who is still “in business” at a hidden locale. The “sisters” must distribute that serum, but they’ve got to elude an army of agents with the same training. This necessitates a “family reunion” as Nat and Yelena track down “papa” Alexi AKA the Red guardian at a frozen gulag and “mama” Melina at her remote pig farm (wonder which place smelled worse). But can this quarreling quartet save the new “Red Room” recruits and thwart the power-mad despot, Dreykov?
After sliding into that unforgiving black bodysuit for the past 11 years, you’d think that Ms. Johansson wouldn’t have anything new to offer as the reformed “killer queen”. And you’d be very mistaken. Sure she handles the incredible action sequences with style and flair (you could consider LUCY and GHOST IN THE SHELL as more “prep”), but she surprises us with the emotional depth this new “old” story reveals in Nat’s complex story. In the quieter moments, there’s still that haunted, sad look in her eyes as she mentally flips the pages of the ledger “filled with red ink”, as Loki taunted her with in the first AVENGERS. In this outing, we see the maternal, nurturing side of the Widow, reminding us of Ms. J’s tender “indie” film roles that followed ENDGAME, nabbing Oscar noms for MARRIAGE STORY and JO JO RABBIT. This is brought out by the superb and inspired pairing of her with the very talented Pugh. Nat wants to protect her while also being frustrated by her in an honest exploration of the sibling dynamic (or even mother/daughter as their matriarch is often absent). Pugh proves she’s ready for the big “studio flicks” after her last big low-budget efforts in the recent take on LITTLE WOMEN (earning her own Oscar nom as Amy) and the creepy MIDSOMMAR as a mostly irritating heroine. Her “burns’ are almost as debilitating as her “roundhouse” kicks ( the delight in her eyes as she calls “big sis” a “poser” is priceless). And we can’t neglect the parents, especially when papa is played with a merry wink by the scene-stealing Harbour. The years between the “escape” and the “reunion” have “filled out” his character in both personality and, well, “physical”presence. He boasts of imagined triumphs to fellow inmates (“But wasn’t Capitan America frozen?”), and later barely squeezes into his old “fight suit” (we keep waiting to hear the latex split). But his blustery blowhard has his tender side too, as he yearns to be a true pater to the ‘sisters”. The same can’t really be said of Weisz, who’s far from the warm matriarch. In fact, she’s nearly as cold as her farm’s stables, as Melina dismisses the women as a long-ago “assignment’ she’s almost forgotten. She’s slow to “warm-up”, though her revived passion for her partner is hilariously endearing and a bit moving. None of that applies to the story’s ‘big baddie”. played by Winstone as a waddling barrel filled with bile. His Dreykov craves control and power as most would desire food and oxygen. He’s a mastermind most worthy of Nat and her crew, including Fabenle’s affable Mason, who complains but still deeply cares for his often brusque demanding “boss”.
Hey Marvel movie geeks. Here’s the Widow over the years. First, on the far left is her look in those early 1960s Iron Man stories in “Tales of Suspense”. In the middle is her hero (or heroine) guise from the 70s in the “Amazing Adventures” comics, both drawn by “Dashing” Don Heck. And on the far right is a publicity still for a proposed 1975 ABC TV show starring Angela Bowie (yes, David’s wife).
Marvel Studios, once again, taps a talent that not a part of the “blockbuster brigade’ to guide this rousing adventure. Director Cate Shortland is mainly known for intimate character-driven “indies” like LORE and BERLIN SYNDROME, but can now add action/spy epic to her resume”. She keeps the tale moving swiftly with confidence in both the big stunt “set-pieces” (and big kudos to that stunt team) to the exchanges that reveal key elements of the main characters (the reunion meal is compelling as is the gas station verbal sparring of the sister widows). And oh, those action experiences, just as thrilling as anything in F9, but made more riveting by our interest in the heroines (and an out-of-shape hero). And as with the other MCU flicks, this isn’t set in a “bubble” as others refer to Nat’s recent exploits (Yelena wonders why she doesn’t send a call to that “god from outer space”). And I shouldn’t have to tell you to stick around through the end credits, should I ( a sweet “payoff’ for the fans)? And that’s who this globe-hopping romp was intended. The fans of the character are generously given a chance to say a proper farewell to the wondrous Johannson (she’s even an executive producer on this). Some are calling this entry unnecessary, but it gives proper respect to a comics icon that’s added so much to the Marvel heritage, letting a terrific teammate (a superb partner to all the Avengers, especially Cap in WINTER SOLDIER) ambling into one final sunset. Bye-bye and bravo BLACK WIDOW. And consider that “ledger” finally wiped clean.
3.5 Out of 4
BLACK WIDOW opens in theatres everywhere on 7/8/2021 and is available via Premier Access on the Disney+ streaming service on 7/9/2021
In Alcon Entertainment’s fast-paced, high-adrenaline action thriller POINT BREAK, a young FBI agent, Johnny Utah (Luke Bracey), infiltrates a cunning team of thrill-seeking elite athletes, led by the charismatic Bodhi (Edgar Ramirez). The athletes are suspected of carrying out a spate of crimes in extremely unusual ways.
Deep undercover, and with his life in imminent danger, Utah strives to prove they are the architects of this string of inconceivable crimes.
The film is replete with the most daring athleticism ever seen in a motion picture. These action adventure feats are performed by elite athletes representing the world’s best in class in big wave surfing, wingsuit flying, sheer-face snowboarding, free rock climbing, and high-speed motocross riding.
Directed by Ericson Core (“Invincible”), POINT BREAK stars Edgar Ramirez (“Zero Dark Thirty,” “The Bourne Ultimatum,” “Carlos the Jackal”) as Bodhi, and Luke Bracey (“G.I. Joe: Retaliation,” “November Man”) as Johnny Utah, along with Teresa Palmer (“Warm Bodies”), Delroy Lindo (“Sahara,” “Gone in Sixty Seconds”), and Ray Winstone (“Noah,” “The Departed”). The score is by composer Tom Holkenberg (“Mad Max: Fury Road”).
POINT BREAK is inspired by the classic 1991 hit starring Patrick Swayze and Keanu Reeves. It is scheduled for release in Real D 3D and 2D on December 25, 2015.
WAMG invites you to enter for a chance to win a pass (Good for 2) to the advance 3D screening of POINT BREAK on Wednesday, December 16th at 7PM in the St. Louis area.
We will contact the winners by email.
Answer the following about the original film:
Who directed the movie?
Who played Tyler Endicott?
What is the name of the event Bodhi talked about experiencing in Australia?
TO ENTER, ADD YOUR NAME, ANSWERS AND EMAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.
OFFICIAL RULES:
1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.
2. A pass does not guarantee a seat at a screening. Seating is on a first-come, first served basis. The theater is overbooked to assure a full house. The theater is not responsible for overbooking.
3. No purchase necessary.
The film is rated PG-13 by the MPAA for “violence, thematic material involving perilous activity, some sexuality, language and drug material.”
Sam Ellis (Patrick Wilson) is a high-powered lawyer with the U.S. Attorney’s office who is on a fast track to a higher political office. He has a loving wife (Lena Headey) and young son, the admiration of his colleagues, and the interest of a Washington power-broker (Richard Dreyfuss). In fact, Sam has everything going his way in life. But something is not quite right with Sam. There is a disconnect going on in the seemingly comfortable relationship with his wife, and Sam is turning to other sexual outlets to relieve the tension of his stressful job and super-powered future.
When a routine interview with a witness on a case turns out to be with a high-end escort, things begin to change for Sam. No longer satisfied with masturbating to internet porn, Sam makes contact with an escort service and starts having regular sexual encounters, with a new woman every time. But secrets this big are hard to keep, and we become witnesses ourselves to the tension of Sam’s predicament. Will his wife find out? What will the truth do to his political aspirations? Will the FBI investigate the escort agency and will the agency then implicate him?
A story like this really rests on the strength of its performances, and ZIPPER comes up aces in that department, as director Mora Stephens has culled fine performances from an excellent cast. Wilson, probably best known as the father in the INSIDIOUS films, plays Sam as a southern charmer; handsome and self-assured, Sam draws us in to sympathize with him even as we are repulsed by his behavior.
This dramatic tension works extremely well, as Sam’s sexual obsession affects his daily life more and more. Headey (TVs GAME OF THRONES), as always, lets her understated intelligence shine through in a low-key performance that makes her betrayal all the more affecting when the inevitable final outburst of emotion arrives. Dreyfuss is not wasted in the pivotal role of the snake-charmer, and John Cho and Ray Winstone also lend solid support. The escorts are also portrayed by some fine young actresses, including a particularly sexy Alexandra Breckenridge, and Penelope Mitchell as a younger escort with her own sad story. Mitchell is especially good in a wonderful scene that takes place in Sam’s parked car, which represents just how low this man has fallen.
The sex scenes—and there are many—are intimately shot and have a somewhat distorted quality, giving the impression of an almost drug-induced state that Sam is experiencing. At times during the sex, Sam has the look of someone on a bender who has suddenly realized where he was and what he was doing, and wondered why. Or perhaps it’s only the guilt of a generally good man doing something bad.
The main themes of ZIPPER concern the correlation between sex and politics, such as the addictive nature of both, the constant juxtaposition of doing things in secret that others want to know about, the use of sex as a political weapon. It seems to conclude that the very obsessive nature of certain sexual behavior is the very thing that makes a good politician. The film even darkly suggests that any sexual act can be used to achieve the means to an end, to help protect a political career.
Dramas mixing sex and politics are nothing new, ranging from the well-done (see THE GOOD WIFE on TV) to the tawdry (BULWORTH, anyone?). ZIPPER joins this genre as a very well-acted and thought-provoking study of a descent into sexual addiction.
RATING: 3 ½ out of 5 stars
ZIPPER is in Theaters and On Demand August 28, 2015
The trailer for the remake of Kathryn Bigelow’s POINT BREAK has arrived.
Inspired by the classic 1991 hit starring Patrick Swayze and, whoa, Keanu Reeves, Warner Bros. Pictures will release it in on December 25.
The film stars Édgar Ramírez (“Zero Dark Thirty,” “The Bourne Ultimatum,” “Carlos the Jackal”) as Bodhi, and Luke Bracey (“G.I. Joe: Retaliation,” “November Man”) as Johnny Utah, along with Ray Winstone (“Noah,” “The Departed”), Teresa Palmer (“Warm Bodies”) and Delroy Lindo (“Sahara,” “Gone in Sixty Seconds”), under the direction of Ericson Core (“Invincible”).
In Alcon Entertainment’s fast-paced, high-adrenaline action thriller POINT BREAK, a young FBI agent, Johnny Utah (Luke Bracey), infiltrates a cunning team of thrill-seeking elite athletes – led by the charismatic Bodhi (Edgar Ramirez). The athletes are suspected of carrying out a spate of crimes in extremely unusual ways.
Deep undercover, and with his life in imminent danger, Utah strives to prove they are the architects of this string of inconceivable crimes.
Director Ericson Core, who served as director of photography on such films as INVINCIBLE, THE FAST AND THE FURIOUS and PAYBACK, also serves as director of photography on POINT BREAK.
THE GUNMAN, the new action thriller from Pierre Morel, the director of Taken, stars Sean Penn, Javier Bardem, Idris Elba, Ray Winstone and Mark Rylance.
In the film, Sean Penn stars as former special-ops agent JAMES TERRIER, who is suddenly targeted by some of the world’s best hit men. Terrier must dig into his top-secret past to figure out who wants him dead, and why.
Open Road Films will release THE GUNMAN nationwide on Friday, March 20th.
WAMG invites you to enter for a chance to win passes (Good for 2) to the advance screening of THE GUNMAN on March 16th at 7PM in the St. Louis area.
We will contact the winners by email.
Answer the following:
Sean Penn headlined three movies in 1983. This totally underrated film, along with it being one of Penn’s best roles, featured another character named “Viking” Lofgren.
Name the movie and the actor.
TO ENTER, ADD YOUR NAME, ANSWER AND EMAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.
OFFICIAL RULES:
1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.
2. A pass does not guarantee a seat at a screening. Seating is on a first-come, first served basis. The theater is overbooked to assure a full house. The theater is not responsible for overbooking.
3. No purchase necessary.
The film is rated R for strong violence, language and some sexuality.
Sean Penn is armed with the truth in the first poster for the new action thriller THE GUNMAN. (via Fandango)
THE GUNMAN, the new action thriller from Pierre Morel, the director of TAKEN and THE TRANSPORTER, stars Sean Penn, Javier Bardem, Idris Elba, Ray Winstone and Mark Rylance. The film opens in theaters March 20, 2015.
Open Road Films has released the trailer for the new action thriller THE GUNMAN starring Sean Penn, Javier Bardem, Idris Elba, Ray Winstone and Mark Rylance. Check it out below.
Sean Penn stars as a former Special Forces soldier and military contractor suffering from PTSD. He tries to reconnect with his long time love, but first must go on the run from London to Barcelona and across Europe in order to clear his name.
Based on Jean-Patrick Manchette’s novel The Prone Gunman, THE GUNMAN was directed by Pierre Morel (Taken, The Transporter franchise).
Alcon Entertainment’s action-thriller POINT BREAK, starring Édgar Ramírez, Luke Bracey, Ray Winstone, Teresa Palmer and Delroy Lindo, begins principal photography today, it was announced by Alcon principals Andrew Kosove and Broderick Johnson.
The production will film on four continents, including North America, Europe, South America and Asia, and features stunts performed by the world’s top extreme sports athletes, as opposed to stunt performers. Locations set for filming include Germany, Austria, Italy, Switzerland, France, Mexico, Venezuela, French Polynesia, India and the United States. Alcon will release through its output deal with Warner Bros. Pictures.
Ericson Core (“Invincible”) is directing from Kurt Wimmer’s (“Salt,” “Law Abiding Citizen”) screenplay. Ramírez (“Zero Dark Thirty,” “Che: Part One”) stars as Bodhi and Bracey (“G.I. Joe: Retaliation,” upcoming “The Best of Me”) will portray Johnny Utah.
POINT BREAK is inspired by the classic 1991 hit starring Patrick Swayze and Keanu Reeves.
In “Point Break,” a young FBI agent infiltrates an extraordinary team of extreme sports athletes he suspects of masterminding a string of unprecedented, sophisticated corporate heists. Deep undercover, and with his life in danger, he strives to prove they are the architects of the mind-boggling crimes that are devastating the world’s financial markets.
The film marks an extraordinarily ambitious shooting schedule involving some of the most daring stunts ever committed to film. Extreme sports featured include surfing 70-foot waves, snowboarding, wingsuit flying, free rock climbing, and high-speed motorcycle stunts.
Johnson and Kosove are producing, along with John Baldecchi, Chris Taylor and Kurt Wimmer. Studio Babelsberg will also co-produce. RGM Media principal Devesh Chetty and investor John McMurrick, Chairman of Marloss Entertainment, will serve as executive producers.
Renowned extreme athletes performing stunts in the film include surfers Makua Rothman, Billy Kemper, Brian Keaulana and Ahanu Tson-dru; snowboarders Lucas DeBari, Ralph Backstrom, Mitch Toelderer, Mike Basich and Xavier De La Rue; motorcyclists Riley Harper and Oakley Lehman; wingsuit stunt pilots Jeb Corliss, Jon Devore, Julian Boulle, Noah Bahnson and Mike Swanson; and free climber Chris Sharma, among others.
Director Ericson Core, who served as director of photography on such films as “The Fast and the Furious,” will also serve as director of photography. Other behind-the-scene team members include Oscar-winning editor Thom Noble (“Thelma & Louise,” “Witness”), production designer Udo Kramer (“North Face,” “The Physician”) and Oscar-nominated costume designer Lisy Christl (“Anonymous,” “White House Down”).
It is scheduled for release on August 7, 2015, and will be distributed in North America and in select territories around the world by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.