_files_images_Ghost-Rider_0Now here’s a strange bit of news for all you Marvel “true believers” out there.  Apparently, the second Ghost Rider--yes of COURSE there’ll be a second Ghost Rider--is not going to be a “reboot”, but in fact will function approximately like what Casino Royale did for the Bond series.  Here’s the world from director David Goyer:

“It’s not exactly a reboot…I hate to say it’s more realistic, because he’s got a flaming skull for a head, but it’s a bit more stripped down and darker.  It’s definitely changing tone.  What ‘Casino Royale’ was to the Bond movies, hopefully this will be to ‘Ghost Rider’…this story picks up eight years after the first film…It doesn’t contradict anything that happened in the first film, but we’re pretending that our audience hasn’t seen the first film.  It’s as if you took the same character where things ended in the first film and then picked it up eight years later, he’s just in a much darker, existential place.”

Ghost Rider.  Will be darker and more existential.  Why does this have the ring of the phrase “train wreck” to it?  And if they bring back Nicholas Cage, that should REALLY make things weird.

Popularity: unranked [?]

200px-bangkok_dangerous_2008_posterAh, remakes.  I love you so.

And when I first saw the trailers for the remake of Bangkok Dangerous, featuring no less than Nicholas Cage as hitman Joe, I confess that I had some serious reservations.

Why?  Because that trailer looked about as dull as a burlap sack full of wet hair, that’s why.  And when I watched the movie, I was pleasantly surprised…but not by very much.

Hitman Joe is the best there is—a fact that a whole lot of other fictional hitmen would LOVE to dispute via all manner of lethal hardware—and he’s on his way to his final job, four kills in Bangkok.  He hires a local pickpocket to serve as his go-between between himself and his bosses, but eventually takes a liking to the pickpocket, training him in the art of killing as his student.  Joe’s first three kills go off with varying levels of resistance, but his fourth kill, the Prime Minister of Thailand, isn’t so easy.  The pickpocket Joe trained has made it abundantly clear to Joe that the Prime Minister really IS one of Thailand’s finest, and Joe’s trust in his pickpocket friend / student is getting in the way.  Now, Joe’s on the run, and his pickpocket friend is now in danger from the syndicate that hired Joe in the first place.

When you compare this one to the original, there is almost no comparison at all—every line that comes out of Nicholas Cage’s mouth is a violation of the original canon.  The original hitman Joe, you see, was deaf and mute.  The comparisons only get worse from there.

Frankly, I was somewhat surprised that the movie itself wasn’t as dull as the trailer looked to be, but then, I wasn’t at ALL surprised to find out that the movie itself was only slightly more exciting than the dull-as-dishwater trailer.  Still, I actually found my mind drifting occasionally during this one, a bad sign for an action movie, and a DEADLY bad sign for a remake of an Asian action movie.

When even fiery explosions aren’t sufficient to keep an audience’s attention, you’ve really got to question the value of this movie at all.  And frankly, after watching Nicholas Cage snarl and growl his way coldly through this whole thing, I’m all the more convinced that he needs to stick to suspense / thrillers where he can see what’s coming.  Because when he’s without his precognitive state he just can’t seem to carry a tune, metaphorically.  Seriouly, watching Cage as a hitman who grew a conscience on his last hit left me as cold as the corpse of Lindsay Lohan’s career.  And while I’m at it, can we PLEASE put that whole theme to bed once and for all?  I’m getting sick of hitmen who go through life snarling and growling and just being cold toward everybody until the last twenty minutes or so when they have this epiphany that, son of a bitch, they’re killing ACTUAL HUMAN BEINGS!!

It’s like watching a really unpleasant version of Soylent Green, where Charlton Heston’s running around with a Big Bear .50 caliber rifle with a monster scope, screaming “I’ve been shooting at PEOPLE!  At PEEEEEE—PUHHHLLLL!”

And sadly, that image will be the most fun I got out of Bangkok Dangerous.

So thank you, Pang brothers, for executing a truly craptacular remake and wasting my time by making the whole thing only slightly less boring than one of the worst trailers I’ve ever seen.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Coming Soon – Knowing


Would you like to be able to predict the future? What you could predict only the bad events in history, would you still want to do it? Knowing is a movie starring Nicholas Cage which will come to a cinema near you on March 20. Cage is a teacher that decides to take a dip in the past. By uncovering a 50-year old list filled with numbers he realizes it contains all the bad stuff that happened on Earth during those 50 years. And the list shows events that are going to happen soon.

Will Cage succeed against mathematical accuracy and logic to survive? Is this another disaster movie we don’t actually need? We’ll tell you more once it hits the box office.

Popularity: unranked [?]

I came across these pictures (via sci-fi web site) of Nicolas Cage working on Kick Ass, a movie about a superhero daddy named Big Daddy and a superhero daughter named Hit Girl. Apparently, Cage’s character is sleazy, violent and un-fatherly.

Filming continues in Toronto with casting notices for high school looking extras.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Popularity: 1% [?]

 Bangkok Dangerous “Water Bottle Shootout” Clip

Check out an action-packed clip from the upcoming Pang brothers’ film, BANGKOK DANGEROUS, starring Nicholas Cage as Joe, a remorseless hitman, who is in Bangkok to execute four enemies of a ruthless crime boss named Surat. Bangkok Dangerous hits theaters September 5th!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Popularity: 1% [?]