First Look Teaser Released For MAX Original Series DUNE: PROPHECY

This week during the Warner Bros. Discovery Upfront presentation, Casey Bloys, Chairman and CEO, HBO and Max Content, unveiled a first look teaser of the Max Original drama series DUNE: PROPHECY. The six-episode season debuts this fall on Max.

From the expansive universe of “Dune,” created by acclaimed author Frank Herbert, and 10,000 years before the ascension of Paul Atreides, DUNE: PROPHECY follows two Harkonnen sisters as they combat forces that threaten the future of humankind and establish the fabled sect that will become known as the Bene Gesserit. DUNE: PROPHECY is inspired by the novel SISTERHOOD OF DUNE, written by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson.

The cast includes Emily Watson, Olivia Williams, Travis Fimmel, Jodhi May, Mark Strong, Sarah-Sofie Boussnina, Josh Heuston, Chloe Lea, Jade Anouka, Faoileann Cunningham, Edward Davis, Aoife Hinds, Chris Mason, Shalom Brune-Franklin, Jihae, Tabu, Charithra Chandran, Jessica Barden, Emma Canning, and Yerin Ha.

Alison Schapker serves as showrunner and executive producer. Diane Ademu-John co-developed the series and serves as executive producer. Anna Foerster executive produced and directed multiple episodes including the first. Jordan Goldberg, Mark Tobey, John Cameron, Matthew King, Scott Z. Burns, and Jon Spaihts executive produce with New York Times bestselling author Brian Herbert, along with Byron Merritt and Kim Herbert as executive producers for the Frank Herbert estate. New York Times bestselling author Kevin J. Anderson serves as co-producer.

The series is co-produced by Max and Legendary Television with Legendary also producing the film franchise that has released award-winning filmmaker Denis Villeneuve’s two installments to critical acclaim, the first, DUNE, garnered six Oscars. https://www.max.com/movies/dune/e7dc7b3a-a494-4ef1-8107-f4308aa6bbf7

LEAN ON PETE – Review

 

Add another animal star to the ever-expanding movie zoo. Now make room Garfield and Benjy,  ’cause he’s a big fella’, part of the equine film lineage. He’s not recreating a true sports legend like SEABISCUIT or SECRETARIAT. No, he’s a descendant of the fictional horses that have had special friendships with their human riders and trainers. It’s a long line going back to BLACK BEAUTY thru NATIONAL VELVET and MY FRIEND FLICKA up to CASEY’S SHADOW and THE BLACK STALLION (plus there’s the sidekick spin-offs such as MY PAL TRIGGER). From the look of this film’s poster art, movie goers might think they’re in for a new version of the sentimental stories of the friendship between a boy and his “four-footed friend”. Well, hold on to the reins, because this tale’s got a curve more surprising than the twistiest of running tracks. Get ready for a bumpy ride when film fans saddle up LEAN ON PETE. And they’re off…

As the story begins, we’re first introduced to the boy in this “boy and his horse” tale. A young man of 16 years actually, one Charley Thompson (Charlie Plummer), who’s living with his hard-drinking aimless single dad Ray (Travis Fimmel) in a small Oregon town. The new school year is weeks away, but Charley still jogs in the mornings in order to rejoin the track team. A different running route bring s him to a low-rent horse track. Charley’s fascinated and explores the place. One day he ends up helping out a grizzled, surly horse owner, Del (Steve Buscemi). Del gives Charley a couple of bucks, and hires him as an assistant. The young man is soon loading up the truck, carting supplies, and cleaning the stable of Del’s older horses, the run-down “Lean on Pete”. Despite Del’s warnings, Charley soon becomes emotionally attached to Pete. Back home, Ray is pleased that his son is bringing in some extra money. Then, late one night, an assault from a rival puts Ray in the hospital, and Charley becomes the family breadwinner. Dad insists that he travel with Del on the racing circuit. On the way to a big race, Del picks up his jockey, Bonnie (Chloe Sevigny), who becomes another mentor to Charley. On return trip home, Charley learns of Ray’s passing. His only relative is an estranged aunt, Margy, who lives several states away (and who he hasn’t seen in a decade). Before Family Services swoops in, Charley runs back to Del. The next big race is make or break for Pete. If he doesn’t “place” he’ll be sold to a “business” in Mexico. When the worst happens, Charley decides that he will take Pete with him on the long trek to Margy. Will his love for the horse be enough to see them through their big journey to freedom?

Though the noble steed’s name is the film’s title, this really is the story of Charley played with great sensitivity by relative screen newcomer Plummer, who we saw just a few months ago as the kidnapped heir in ALL THE MONEY IN THE WORLD. He covers nearly the whole spectrum of emotions with great skill. There’s the awkward teenage indifference, suddenly replaced by his curiosity about the almost alien world of the racetrack. This prompts his intense empathy for the title horse, which leads to despair when Pete just can’t cut it in competition. And Plummer exudes the teen’s over-confidence and impulsiveness that lead to disaster. But Charley doesn’t give up , and Plummer conveys that determination, compelling the audience to root for him to triumph. It helps that Plummer is never overshadowed by a trio of screen vets. The always engaging Buscemi delivers as Del, part mentor, part tough taskmaster, and all curmudgeon. He rewards Charley for his hard work, but admonishes him soon after for his horrific table manners (“chew your food, you’re making me sick”). Most of all, Del is a realist, who doesn’t romanizes his work or horses. The same can be said of Sevigny’s Bonnie, who becomes Charley’s big sister. Though only in a few scenes, she delivers the drama as she tries to tell the smitten Charley that Pete is a commodity, not a pet. The film’s third act introduces the energetic Steve Zahn as Silver, a drifter who advises Charley on how to be street smart. His affable nature quickly turns when Zahn shows us his dark, violent side. Fimmel also does great work as Charley’s doomed daddy.

Director/screenwriter Andrew Haigh adapts Willy Vlautin’s novel with a slow, steady hand. As mentioned earlier, this story up-ends all the Animal/human tales of bonding. Charley’s love for Pete is not enough, and he pays a heavy price for his impulsive hubris (this is not a flick for horse-loving tots). Unfortunately, once the duo leaves the racing area (and Del and Bonnie), the film meanders at a snail’s pace. A side trip visit to a couple of video game playing lunkheads has little purpose. Plus the Zahn-street subplot seems to be dropped in from another film. The locations capture the still untamed parts of the country, but the dusty vistas that dwarf the duo also becomes repetitious. Perhaps with a tighter script and unforgiving editing, LEAN ON PETE would “win”, rather than merely “show”.

3 Out of 5

LEAN ON PETE opens everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinemas

 

WARCRAFT – Review

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So, we’re almost at the halfway point for movie year 2016. Since we’re a few weeks into the Summer flick season, the studios are trying to hedge their bets (and investments) by delivering entertainment with a recognizable name. There’s been a glut of sequels (two this very weekend), and two franchise films based on comic book characters (Cap’s latest is the year’s biggest hit). Hmmm, what other properties are ripe for cinematic exploitation? Ah yes, games! Just a few weeks ago ANGRY BIRDS, an animated romp based on an “app”, grabbed the number one box office slot from the shield-slinger! And this weekend sees a live action/CGI-animated hybrid based on an immensely popular on-line video game that began 22  years ago. Now, the studios have been trying to lure game players into the multiplex for years, well over twenty since those SUPER MARIO BROTHERS made the big bounce to live action back in 1993. STREET FIGHTER and MORTAL KOMBAT soon followed to so-so interest. WING COMMANDER, DOOM, and HALO were also adapted in the remaining years, but nothing really translated with great numbers. Now Universal is hoping that audiences will “log out” and embrace a non-interactive adventure set in that popular “cyber-world” of WARCRAFT.
The story begins with two orcs (savage human-like behemoths with pointed ears and protruding tusk-like fangs) from the world of Durotar named Durotan (Toby Kebbell) and Draka (Anna Galvin) who eagerly await the birth of their child. But duty calls when they become part of the sorcerer Gul’dan’s (Daniel Wu) invading forces. He has found a way to open a magic portal to the human world, Azeroth. There they will capture the residents and use their collected life force to power multiple portals, so that the orcs and their allies can take over the new world, since their home planet is dying. But a young human apprentice wizard named Khadgar (Ben Schnetzer) alerts King Llane Wyrynn (Dominic Cooper), who is also head of the Alliance with elves, dwarfs, and other races. The good king sends his most trusted warrior (and brother-in-law), Anduin Lothar (Travis Fimmel)  to engage the help of the veteran wizard Medivh (Ben Foster) AKA the “Guardian”. When Lothar’s men are attacked by an orc platoon, they take an orc prisoner, a woman shunned by her society who seems nearly human, named Garona (Paula Patton). Eventually she becomes a friend to Lothar, but Garona is not alone in her sympathies. Durotan believes that Gul’dan has been driven mad by his magics. The only hope for both worlds rests on the defeat of the powerful crazed sorcerer before his plan comes to fruition.

A very talented cast is almost overwhelmed by the almost nonstop mayhem. That they’re not drowned out by the constant “sound and fury” is a testament to their considerable skills. Fimmel is a stoic, sturdy action star who may be on the road to a solid film career after his star-making turn on TV’s “The Vikings”. Foster does his best to add some world-weary gravitas to the grim guardian, but is hampered the character’s hazy motivations. Patton is able to project a sultry exotic sexuality, despite the ludicrous fangs that make her look like a late, late show cavegirl (they don’t aid her line delivery, either). The compelling Cooper (Tony Stark’s pop in the 1940’s) is given little to do aside from looking concerned and inspiring his troops into battle (he does look great in that nifty lion’s-head helmet). Schnetzer (PRIDE) brings a great deal of energy to his eager, but untested spell-caster. “Motion-capture” actors Kebbell (so good as the villain Koba in DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES), Galvin, Wu, and screen vet Clancy Brown are able to emote expertly despite their often clunky CGI masks and coverings.
I harbored high hopes for this flick when I learned that the very talented young director Duncan Jones was at the helm (his SOURCE CODE was a dandy B-flick delight) while collaborating on the script with Charles Leavitt. Unfortunately the finished product (yeah, more of a product than a film) is a loud, over-stuffed, incoherent, cluttered mess. Perhaps the producers thought that the ‘scope” would placate and even satisfy the games’ many fans. For those of us going in “cold”, the pixels and people seem like half-baked retreads from Peter Jackson’s Tolkien trilogies (which wore out their fans with that third HOBBIT “cash-grab”). Many times we’re just reminded of much better fantasy flicks (“boom-sticks” made me yearn for ARMY OF DARKNESS). The CGI effects and designs are adequate (the orcs were “mini-hulks” while their modes of transport, packs of big fluffy wolves, look like they dashed in from the final TWILIGHT movie). A scorecard is almost needed to keep track of characters, while the banging, bombastic score by Ramin Djawadi is migraine-inducing (the lackluster 3D adds much to the discomfort). The flick lumbers on from battle to battle, wearing the viewer down as if we’re slogging it out with the pixel beasties. It’s two-hour running time feels like a tiresome trilogy. Then, when it appears the blessed end arrives, we’re given an epilogue that rips off Moses (yeah, the Superman origin does that too). Mr. Jones, this is a prime example of when “bad films happen to good people”. On to more worthy efforts! My rating is for the many skilled craftspeople who spent weeks and months staring at their computer screens. May your talents outlast the memory of the dismal, deadly dull WARCRAFT.
1/2 Out of 5

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See The Teaser For The WARCRAFT Movie Trailer Hitting November 6th

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The wait is almost over. Fans of Warcraft got a first look at Duncan Jones’ WARCRAFT movie with a quick teaser of the trailer debuting in three days on November 6th.

From Legendary Pictures and Universal Pictures comes WARCRAFT, an epic adventure of world-colliding conflict based on Blizzard Entertainment’s global phenomenon.

The peaceful realm of Azeroth stands on the brink of war as its civilization faces a fearsome race of invaders: Orc warriors fleeing their dying home to colonize another. As a portal opens to connect the two worlds, one army faces destruction and the other faces extinction. From opposing sides, two heroes are set on a collision course that will decide the fate of their family, their people and their home.

So begins a spectacular saga of power and sacrifice in which war has many faces, and everyone fights for something.

Directed by Duncan Jones (MOON, SOURCE CODE), the film stars Travis Fimmel, Ben Foster, Paula Patton, Ben Schnetzer, Dominic Cooper, Ruth Negga, Toby Kebbell, Robert Kazinsky, Clancy Brown, Anna Galvin, Daniel Wu.

WARCRAFT will be released in 3D by Universal Pictures
on Friday, June 10, 2016.

Head over to the official Warcraft site for the latest news on the film: 

Follow on Twitter: twitter.com/warcraftmovie

Like on Facebook: www.facebook.com/WarcraftMovie

instagram.com/WarcraftMovie

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New Poster For WARCRAFT Movie Arrives – First Trailer Debuts On Nov. 6

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On Friday (Nov. 6) Universal will release the long-awaited first trailer for WARCRAFT, but in the meantime, check out this tasty morsel of a poster.

Director Duncan Jones tweeted out the trailer news.

From Legendary Pictures and Universal Pictures comes WARCRAFT, an epic adventure of world-colliding conflict based on Blizzard Entertainment’s global phenomenon.

The peaceful realm of Azeroth stands on the brink of war as its civilization faces a fearsome race of invaders: Orc warriors fleeing their dying home to colonize another. As a portal opens to connect the two worlds, one army faces destruction and the other faces extinction. From opposing sides, two heroes are set on a collision course that will decide the fate of their family, their people and their home.

So begins a spectacular saga of power and sacrifice in which war has many faces, and everyone fights for something.

Directed by Duncan Jones (MOON, SOURCE CODE), the film stars Travis Fimmel, Ben Foster, Paula Patton, Ben Schnetzer, Dominic Cooper, Ruth Negga, Toby Kebbell, Robert Kazinsky, Clancy Brown, Anna Galvin, Daniel Wu.

The film will be released in 3D by Universal Pictures on Friday, June 10, 2016.

Head over to the official Warcraft site for the latest news on the film: 

Follow on Twitter: twitter.com/warcraftmovie

Like on Facebook: www.facebook.com/WarcraftMovie

instagram.com/WarcraftMovie

Warcraft-Orgrim

Duncan Jones’ WARCRAFT Film Has Its First Photo And Logo

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We’ve got your first look at Legendary’s WARCRAFT – the 3D epic adventure of world-colliding conflict based upon Blizzard Entertainment’s globally-renowned universe.

Directed by Duncan Jones (MOON, SOURCE CODE) and written by Charles Leavitt and Duncan Jones, the film is a Legendary Pictures, Blizzard Entertainment and Atlas Entertainment production.

The cast includes Travis Fimmel, Ben Foster, Paula Patton, Ben Schnetzer, Dominic Cooper, Ruth Negga, Toby Kebbell, Robert Kazinsky, Clancy Brown, Anna Galvin, and Daniel Wu.

Jones went on Twitter to share with fans the first photos of Orgrim from his upcoming film.

The producers are Charles Roven, Thomas Tull, Jon Jashni, Alex Gartner and Stuart Fenegan. Jillian Share, Brent O’Connor, Michael Morhaime and Paul Sams serve as executive producers. Rob Pardo, Chris Metzen, Nick Carpenter and Rebecca Steel Roven co-produce.

Legendary’s WARCRAFT will be released in 3D by Universal Pictures on Friday, June 10, 2016.

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Image Debut : Billy Bob Thornton & Paul Wesley in THE BAYTOWN DISCO

The first official images of Billy Bob Thornton and Paul Wesley in THE BAYTOWN DISCO, the upcoming “Southern Whip-Ass Extravaganza” action comedy from director Barry Battles have been released, and WAMG has them for you!

Synopsis:

The rousing rebel spirit of a family of Southern thugs takes off at breakneck speed in THE BAYTOWN DISCO — a wickedly playful, high-velocity action-comedy in which three infamously ruthless Alabama brothers find themselves on the wrong side of crooked cops, relentless Feds, mad mobsters, road pirates, tomahawk-wielding bikers, tricky femme fatales and an unforgettable cast of characters as colorful as they are lethal when they finally try to do a single good deed.

THE BAYTOWN DISCO stars Academy Award® winner Billy Bob Thornton (Bad Santa, Monster’s Ball, Sling Blade), Golden Globe winner Eva Longoria (Desperate Housewives, The Sentinel), Thomas Brodie Sangster (Love Actually, Bright Star), Clayne Crawford (Swimfan, A Walk to Remember),  Michael Rapaport (Hitch), Daniel Cudmore (X-Men: The Last Stand, New Moon), Travis Fimmel (The Experiment, The Beast) Andre Braugher (Homicide: Life on the Street, Salt), and Paul Wesley (Vampire Diaries).

Photo credit: Courtesy of LLeju Productions

FOR MORE INFO:

Web: http://baytowndisco.com/

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Baytown-Disco/143699379032436

Twitter: http://twitter.com/baytowndisco