Everyone I know is obsessed with success and growth,
willing to go to any length to realize this solemn oath.
Many are driven to realize this growth at any expense,
Pursuing an invisible façade without any whims or pretense.
But many are misguided to what growth really means,
What it represents and the reason for its aura and alluring sheen,
Growth may vary from material gains to emotional solace,
Ranging from appreciation of work to owing a pristine palace.
It could be as simple as finding internal peace and calmness of the mind,
Or manifest into desires of conquering the world and ruling every kind.
Growth has the potential to script life’s greatest blockbuster,
Or turn everyday life into an out of control rollercoaster.
It is crucial to realize and appreciate what growth truly means to each,
If not it could turn into a growth where happiness is unfaithfully out of reach.
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Prejudice - The Silent Hurt !!!
Prejudice is venom that seethes the inside,
Slowly but surely that embroils the outside.
Victims of prejudice are oblivious to the reality,
Blaming their luck or doubting their rationality.
Prejudice may spawn from innocuous bias,
Or is bread through ones malicious desires.
Reason and intellect are compromised for indifference,
Tendency to victimize grows and overcomes common sense.
Prejudice may lead to pessimism and manifest into self destructive depression,
Leaving victims clueless as to the reason for this cruel and crushing repression.
Many are unable to fathom the right way forward and find it very hard to cope,
Pondering over the idea of submission where the notion of incompetence grows.
Prejudice is often borne out of ego and insecurity of the weak,
Where the weak try to nullify their shortcoming by calculated conjunctures.
Prejudice is often used as a tool to blunt the growth of the promising,
A de facto measure of the leader to stymie the new talent from rising.
Often the reality of prejudice is dismissed as paranoia,
But the effects of this smothering are slowly unraveling.
When faced with prejudice, patience is truly the greatest virtue,
Make sure facts and constructive criticism are not glorified lies.
Make sure to stay true to your strengths and always work on your weakness,
But don’t allow a prejudiced view be the bane that espouses ignorance.
Slowly but surely that embroils the outside.
Victims of prejudice are oblivious to the reality,
Blaming their luck or doubting their rationality.
Prejudice may spawn from innocuous bias,
Or is bread through ones malicious desires.
Reason and intellect are compromised for indifference,
Tendency to victimize grows and overcomes common sense.
Prejudice may lead to pessimism and manifest into self destructive depression,
Leaving victims clueless as to the reason for this cruel and crushing repression.
Many are unable to fathom the right way forward and find it very hard to cope,
Pondering over the idea of submission where the notion of incompetence grows.
Prejudice is often borne out of ego and insecurity of the weak,
Where the weak try to nullify their shortcoming by calculated conjunctures.
Prejudice is often used as a tool to blunt the growth of the promising,
A de facto measure of the leader to stymie the new talent from rising.
Often the reality of prejudice is dismissed as paranoia,
But the effects of this smothering are slowly unraveling.
When faced with prejudice, patience is truly the greatest virtue,
Make sure facts and constructive criticism are not glorified lies.
Make sure to stay true to your strengths and always work on your weakness,
But don’t allow a prejudiced view be the bane that espouses ignorance.
Saturday, December 4, 2010
57th Indian National Film Awards 2010 Winners
Best Film - 'Kutty Shrank'
Best Director - Rituparno Ghosh for Abohoman
Best Supporting Actress - Arundhati Nag for ‘Paa’
Best Supporting Actor - Farooq Sheikh for 'Lahore'
Best Popular Film, Best Director and Best Producer – ‘3 Idiots’
Best Film on Social Issues - Shyam Benegal's 'Well Done Abba'
Best Film on National Integration - Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra's 'Dilli-6'
Best Camerawork - Anjali Shukla.
Best Music Director - Amit Trivedi for Dev D
Best Playback Singer (Male) - Rupam Islam
Best Playback Singer (Female) - Niranjana Sarkar (Housefull)
Best Sound Engineer - Oscar winner Resul Pookutty
Best lyrics - Swananad Kirkirey for 3 Idiots
Best Choreography - K Shivashankar for film Magadheera
Best Children Film - Ottani Pati and Kesu
Best Special Effects - Kamalakannan for film Magadheera
Best Director - Rituparno Ghosh for Abohoman
Best Supporting Actress - Arundhati Nag for ‘Paa’
Best Supporting Actor - Farooq Sheikh for 'Lahore'
Best Popular Film, Best Director and Best Producer – ‘3 Idiots’
Best Film on Social Issues - Shyam Benegal's 'Well Done Abba'
Best Film on National Integration - Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra's 'Dilli-6'
Best Camerawork - Anjali Shukla.
Best Music Director - Amit Trivedi for Dev D
Best Playback Singer (Male) - Rupam Islam
Best Playback Singer (Female) - Niranjana Sarkar (Housefull)
Best Sound Engineer - Oscar winner Resul Pookutty
Best lyrics - Swananad Kirkirey for 3 Idiots
Best Choreography - K Shivashankar for film Magadheera
Best Children Film - Ottani Pati and Kesu
Best Special Effects - Kamalakannan for film Magadheera
Monday, November 22, 2010
Most Anticipated Movies of 2011
Source: http://www.movie-moron.com/?p=13779
20. The Green Hornet
Starring: Seth Rogen, Cameron Diaz, Christoph Waltz
Director: Michel Gondry (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind)
Release Date: 14th January 2011
First up is a comic book adaptation (of which there are many on this list) from wacky director Michel Gondry. Anticipation was a little higher for this before the trailer hit, if only because we all assumed it would be more outlandish than it appears to be, but it still looks like a nicely executed superhero flick. If anything, it seems somewhat reminiscent of Iron Man, in terms of having a strong personality (in this case Seth Rogen) in the central role to give a piece of standard fare that added verve. Also looking good is Kato-vision, as seen at 2:05 in the trailer. We’re being optimistic. It’s potentially the best superhero bromance to ever hit our screens.
19. Fright Night
Starring: Anton Yelchin, Colin Farrell, David Tennant, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Toni Collette
Director: Craig Gillespie (Lars and the Real Girl)
Release Date: 7th October 2011
Star Trek’s Anton Yelchin is Charley Brewster, the young man trying to convince everyone that a murderous vampire (Colin Farrell) has moved in next door. He turns to gothic TV celebrity Peter Vincent (David Tennant) only to find he’s not the tough vampire hunter he portrays. Christopher Mintz-Plasse is Charley’s best friend ‘Evil’ Ed, and Toni Collette plays the mum. The 80s original was an enjoyable, well written comedy horror. This has upped the stakes with a near perfect cast of fun actors.
18. Cowboys And Aliens
Starring: Daniel Craig, Olivia Wilde, Harrison Ford, Sam Rockwell
Director: Jon Favreau
Release Date: 29th July 2011
Most people were sold on this movie on its title alone – it’s about as high concept as it gets. Cowboys. Aliens. Throw in James Bond, Indiana Jones and Miss Tron and you have the kind of movie that makes the crowds at SDCC go nuts:
It’s telling that there was virtually no talk about the movie on that panel…I guess there’s always next year. Director Jon Favreau was hot off of Iron Man when first attached to the project, but now, coming off of the lukewarm reception to the somewhat disappointing Iron Man 2, we’re hoping for a return to form. ‘Lost’ scribe Damon Lindelof has helped out in the writing department, so we’re hoping his nerdcore sensibilities shine through too. Cowboys. Aliens.
17. Thor
Starring: Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman, Anthony Hopkins, Tom Hiddleston, Rene Russo
Director: Kenneth Branagh
Release Date: 29th July 2011
With the mighty Thor hitting theatres, we are one step closer to The Avengers, which we’ve been impatiently waiting for since a badass in an eyepatch broke into Tony Stark’s house. But more than just a stepping stone to a bigger picture, Thor is a different breed of Superhero movie. Sure, there’s a cape or two, and people punch things in the name of truth and justice, but the mythic side of Thor is pretty much unprecedented in the world of superhero movies, and now that we’ve seen stills and that leaked SDCC trailer, we could not be more excited to see what the god of thunder has in store for us.
16. Don’t Be Afraid Of The Dark
Starring: Bailee Madison, Guy Pearce, Katie Holmes
Director: Troy Nixey (first timer, Guillermo del Toro ‘protege’)
Release Date: TBC 2011
It’s a conventional horror premise – young girl sent to live with her father (Pearce), and new girlfriend, discovers creatures in the home who want to claim her as one of their own. But the presence of Guillermo del Toro as hands-on co-writer/co-producer should elevate this to something genuinely unnerving. The filmmakers were going for a PG-13 but got rated R for ‘pervasive scariness.’ It’s a remake of a 1973 made-for-TV film that few will remember. Good to see Guy Pearce getting some mainstream work again.
15. The Adventures Of Tintin: The Secret Of The Unicorn
Starring: Jamie Bell, Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Daniel Craig, Andy Serkis
Director: Steven Spielberg
Release Date: 23rd December 2011
The dream team of Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson are presenting us with an adaptation of Herge’s beloved comic book adventures of Tintin. The ginger-quiffed Belgian reporter is being portrayed by Jamie Bell, who previously collaborated with Peter Jackson on King Kong. You’ll never see Bell’s face though, because the whole thing is being done using the performance capture technology that made James Cameron’s Avatar possible. We’re curious to see what the 3D versions of Herge’s illustrations will look like, and intrigued to see what Spielberg does with the character and the technology. And Daniel Craig’s ‘camp bad guy’:
14. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1
Starring: Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, Taylor Lautner, Anna Kendrick
Director: Bill Condon (Dreamgirls)
Release Date: 18th November 2011
Boy, did we get moaned at for not having Twilight on our list last year. Well I hope you’re happy. Me? I’m confused. One of the votes in this Movie-Moron writers poll was for ‘Twishite: Breaking Dawn’ which was presumably a typo, and the other had the following to say: “2011 looks so crappy that I’d rather laugh and yawn through Twilight than watch most of that list.”
…so yeah. The further adventures of Edward Cullen and his (sort of) paramour – yeah, it’s a word, not just a band – make number 14 on our list. This one’s the craziest storyline of the bunch, leading up to werewolf Jacob falling in love with Bella’s highly intelligent baby vampire.
13. The Greatest Muppet Movie Ever Made
Starring: Jason Segel, Amy Adams, Charles Grodin, Steve Whitmire
Director: James Bobin
Release Date: 25th December 2011
Kermit and Co are like old friends. It’s been a long time since we saw them, and it’ll be a pleasure to see them on screen again – the silver screen is even better! With a working title like The Greatest Muppet Movie Ever Made, writer and star Jason Segel (Forgetting Sarah Marshall) is giving himself a lot to live up to – and that’s a good thing, he’s acknowledging the daunting task ahead of him introducing the Muppets to a whole new generation.
Segel is joined on the project by director James Bobin, an unfamiliar name perhaps, but he was instrumental in bringing us Sacha Baron Cohen’s colourful cast of characters (Ali G, Borat and Bruno) as well as all-singing all-moping Kiwi folk-comedy duo Flight of the Conchords. We can’t wait to see him help the Muppets put on a show to save their old theatre.
12. Contagion
Starring: Matt Damon, Kate Winslet, Marion Cotillard, Jude Law, Gwenyth Paltrow
Director: Steven Soderbergh
Release Date: 21st October 2011
Think Swine Flu: The Movie. Action-thriller about a deadly disease and the international team of doctors contracted by the Center for Disease Control to deal with the spread. It’s also about how information spreads virally in the internet age. Contagion is a global story, filming in 10 countries, described as ‘procedural’ yet ‘breakneck tense’. With Steven Soderbergh directing, a script by the writer of The Bourne Ultimatum, and a cast this strong, we’re confident it’ll be more along the lines of 1971′s brainy The Andromeda Strain than Dustin Hoffman’s Outbreak. Also Gwyneth Paltrow’s character is the first to contract the horrible disease, so that’ll be fun to watch.
11. Paul
Cast: Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Seth Rogen (voice), Jason Bateman, Kristen Wiig
Director: Greg Mottola
Release Date: 18th March 2011
Two British sci-fi geeks (Pegg and Frost) go on a road trip through America. On the way, they discover an escaped alien named ‘Paul’ (voiced by Seth Rogen) near Area 51. As they try to reunite him with his mother ship, they find Paul has many more opinions than your typical ET. You might expect Edgar Wright to be directing this, but instead it’s Greg Mottola (Superbad, Adventureland). Pegg, Frost and Mottola are guaranteed to provide a few laughs, despite the dull title and somewhat thin premise. And it’s great to see Nick Frost finally getting his Hollywood due, hope it’s not too late.
10. Sucker Punch
Starring: Emily Browning, Jon Hamm, Vanessa Hudgens
Director: Zack Snyder
Release Date: 25th March 2011
The first original movie from slow-mo supremo Zack Snyder. The director of the Dawn of the Dead, 300, Watchmen and that owl movie is taking us inside the mind of Babydoll, a young woman committed to to a mental institution who dreams up some pretty crazy stuff whilst inside (see trailer). This is supposedly set in the 1950s, so quite how her fantasy world comes off as a yet-to-be-invented Heavy Metal/anime hybrid remains to be seen. What we can already see is that Snyder’s visual flair is intact, and his female ensemble cast looks pretty kick ass hot insane. This is Snyder’s last chance to prove he can do good character work before he directs the Superman reboot.
9. X-Men: First Class
Starring: James McAvoy, Kevin Bacon, Michael Fassbender, Rose Byrne, January Jones
Director: Matthew Vaughn
Release Date: 3rd June 2011
The X-Men franchise wasn’t on the boil for long. Bryan Singer’s semi-good X-Men was the movie that kicked off the superhero boom at the turn of the century, its sequel remains one of the best superhero movies ever made, but the third movie was weak and spinoff Wolverine fared no better. But wait, here comes Matthew Vaughn, the director of the excellent Kick-Ass, to tackle an X-Men prequel. And Kevin Bacon is the villain. Ok they started shooting without a finished script. And the 60s set images look a bit Austin Powers. It’s hard to know how this will turn out, but there are more positives than negatives and we have a lot of faith in Vaughn.
8. Sherlock Holmes 2
Starring: Robert Downey Jr, Jude Law, Noomi Rapace, Jared Harris
Director: Guy Ritchie
Release Date: 16th December 2011
Guy Ritchie surprised a lot of people with the first Sherlock Holmes, a movie that was outside his comfort zone but managed to retain his sensibilities and be a fast paced, humourous adventure. In contrast to the staid adaptations of Holmes that have gone before, Ritchie managed to inject some real excitement into the proceedings. Unfortunately, because the movie wasn’t based on anything Conan Doyle had written, it deviated considerably from the structure of Holmes mysteries, and the actual mystery itself didn’t seem so important. But the interplay between all of the characters was great, Robert Downey Jr got to be Robert Downey Jr (which doesn’t seem to bother people) only this time with an English accent, and Jude Law got to shine for once in his supporting role as Watson. Now in the sequel the less-impressive Rachel McAdams is sidelined in favour of Noomi Rapace from The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, and Stephen Fry will play Holmes’ smarter-but-lazier older brother (great casting). Ritchie has already surprised everybody by casting Jared Harris (who impressed on TV’s Fringe and Mad Men) as Moriarty, despite persistent rumours that former Snatch collaborator Brad Pitt would be taking the role.
7. Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 2
Starring: Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson, Ralph Fiennes, Bill Nighy, John Hurt
Director: David Yates
Release Date: 15th July 2011
Some will be upset that this hasn’t been put higher on this list, but amongst the writers here there’s a feeling the series has dragged on for slightly too long (8 movies now). Nonetheless expect this to be a rousing finale to one of the most spectacular film series ever made. Harry, Ron, and Hermione go back to Hogwarts to find and destroy Voldemort’s final horcruxes, but when ‘Ol Snake Nose finds out about their mission you can expect to see school totally trashed by Harry and foe firing enough bolts at each other to keep local glaziers in work for years. In fact their fight sequence will reportedly expand on what’s witnessed in the book. Even though Part 1 missed out on 3D, Part 2 will probably be converted in time.
6. Green Lantern
Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Blake Lively, Mark Strong
Director: Martin Campbell (Casino Royale, Edge Of Darkness)
Release Date: 17th June 2011
The highest ranking comic book movie on our list is Green Lantern, the first major DC hero to hit the big screen that isn’t a bat, cat, or Kryptonian refugee. Coming to us from Casino Royale director Martin Campbell, Green Lantern, much like Thor, promises to show us a different side to superheroics and take us on a cosmic adventure. The story follows a test pilot who is given a ring by a dying alien which turns him into the Green Lantern, part of a collective who protect the galaxy from similarly powered villains. There have been a few voices of dissent about the casting of Ryan Reynolds – ignore them, he’s perfect for the role of Hal Jordan. The treatment for the sequel has already been ordered.
5. Scream 4
Starring: Neve Campbell, David Arquette, Courteney Cox, Emma Roberts
Director: Wes Craven
Release Date: 15th April 2011
Scream transformed the horror landscape when it came out in ’96, kicking off the second slasher cycle (the first was after Halloween) and bringing a truly unique tone to the genre. Brilliantly directed as it was, it was Kevin Williamson’s script that really was a cut above. Scream 2 was largely a success too. Then the studio stupidly booted Williamson for the third instalment and the result was something like a Scooby Doo episode. We’re excited about Scream 4 because Williamson is back, and there are 10 years of horror movies (from Asian ghost movies to torture porn) to riff off, in that clever but still frightening way. It’s going to be interesting to see how the clearly-too-old-to-be-doing-this cast (Neve Campbell, David Arquette, Courteney Cox) is melded with the new generation (Emma Roberts, Hayden Panettiere etc). Will they kill off Sidney Prescott?
4. The Cabin In The Woods
Starring: Chris Hemsworth, Jesse Williams, Amy Acker
Director: Drew Goddard
Release Date: 15th April 2011
Whedonites are legion. So having Joss Whedon produce and co-write the script is a good thing in terms of drumming up hype. And Cabin in the Woods promises a new take on a played out horror movie trope – the cabin in the woods. It’s directed by Drew Goddard, who was heavily involved with Lost and wrote Cloverfield. It stars Chris Hemsworth, the man who will be Thor. Shooting was finished a while ago but, like Bond, it’s caught in limbo by of MGM’s financial problems. The script is doing the rounds on the internet if you want to get a head start.
3. Super 8
Starring: Kyle Chandler, Elle Fanning
Director: J.J. Abrams
Release Date: TBC 2011
Godammit, Abrams. You’re doing it again. Remember how the hype for Cloverfield was fueled by furious speculation? How the starfleet uniforms from Star Trek were hidden from the world? Well, here’s J.J. Abrams’ Super 8. Another project shrouded in mystery. We know it’s heavily influenced by the films of producer Steven Spielberg, and that it involves Area 51. We know it involves a group of kids in 1979 playing around making movies with their Super 8 cameras who accidentally capture something sinister, possibly alien, on film. We know one of the stars is Elle Fanning, younger sister of Dakota.
The Movie Preview Critic has a few predictions about what the movie might have to offer, so it’ll be interesting to see how much he gets right:
(One wonders if the filmmakers even know what the movie is, since the creature was designed after the teaser trailer was released.)
2. Hugo Cabret
Starring: Asa Butterfield, Chloe Moretz, Jude Law, Sacha Baron Cohen, Ben Kingsley
Director: Martin Scorsese
Release Date: 9th December 2011
Hugo Cabret is a film of firsts. It is Martin Scorsese’s first children’s movie, it is Martin Scorsese’s first 3D movie, and it is Martin Scorsese’s first major release in ten years not to feature Leonardo DiCaprio. The official story of The Invention of Hugo Cabret is as follows: “Orphan, Clock Keeper, And Thief, 12 year old Hugo lives in the walls of a busy Paris train station, where his survival depends on secrets and anonymity. But when his world suddenly interlocks with an eccentric girl and the owner of a small toy booth in the train station, Hugo’s undercover life, and his most precious secret, are put in jeopardy. A cryptic drawing, a treasured notebook, a stolen key, a mechanical man, and a hidden message all come together…” You can see some of the illustrations from the book upon which the movie is based right here. The movie has the potential to be magical in every sense of the word (apart from the one that means real hocus pocus, of course), which is why id’s so high on our list.
1. The Thing
Starring: Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Joel Edgerton, Eric Christian Olsen
Director: Matthijs van Heijningen Jr.
Release Date: 29th April 2011
Why are we anticipating this so much? Because there’s still so much mileage in the concept (if they are smart filmmakers), the setting and idea haven’t really been revisited by other movies since, and seeing our favourite horror movie ‘prequelised’ decades later has a big curiosity appeal. The prequel has already dropped the ball on two unconventional, but key, elements that helped make the original so unique – the all male cast has gone (the lead is now a hot female who’s helicoptered in), and the large cast of 12 mostly older character-actors has been replaced by the conventional 7 younger characters. It’s asking a lot, but if The Thing prequel turns out to be the smart, well written whodunit mystery it should be, and it stays away from cgi for its creature fx, this will be the cinemagoing experience we at Movie-Moron.com enjoy the most this year. Fingers are firmly crossed.
MOVIES THAT DIDN’T MAKE OUR TOP 20, BUT YOU’LL PROBABLY BE EXCITED ABOUT
Pirates Of The Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
Starring: Johnny Depp, Ian McShane, Penélope Cruz, Geoffrey Rush
Director: Rob Marshall
Release Date: 20th May 2011
Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley are out. Johnny Depp and Geoffrey Rush are in. Good call. The story sees Jack Sparrow and Barbossa embark on a quest to find the elusive fountain of youth, only to discover that Blackbeard (McShane) and his daughter (Cruz) are after it too. There’s a new director, Rob Marshall, whose only non-musical was Memoirs of a Geisha. Hopefully they’ll keep the running time down and won’t let the plot get too bloated.
Fast Five (Fast & Furious 5)
Starring: Vin Diesel, Dwayne Johnson, Paul Walker, Jordana Brewster, Tyrese Gibson
Director: Justin Lin
Release Date: 29th April 2011
Fast & Furious (4) felt like a last role of the dice for Vin Diesel’s career as a leading man, but it paid off huge at the box office. So now he’s sticking around to be joined by Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson and the co-star of 2 Fast 2 Furious, Tyrese Gibson. The plot sees former cop Brian (Walker) and Mia (Brewster) break Dom out of custody and flee to Brazil where they must pull one last job to gain their freedom. But a hard-nosed federal agent (Johnson) is on their trail. The director handled the previous two instalments so you can expect much of the same, with a bit of samba.
World Invasion: Battle LA
Starring: Aaron Eckhart, Michelle Rodriguez, Michael Peña, Bridget Moynahan
Director: Justin Lin
Release Date: 11th March 2011
A Marine platoon faces off against an alien invasion in Los Angeles. The director of Darkness Falls and T’ C’ Massacre: The Beginning is shooting in the Saving Private Ryan handheld style. Hopefully this will be the Black Hawk Down + Independence Day – Jokes it promises. Think large alien ships similar to a Borg cube / Klingon war bird shooting helicopters out of the sky and 8 foot bi-ped creatures street-fighting with the army. The Comic-Con footage went down well. The movie’s probably fairly good as it put Liebesman in the running for the Superman job. At the moment the only footage online is this 3 second clip -
Captain America: The First Avenger
Starring: Chris Evans, Hugo Weaving, Tommy Lee Jones, Stanley Tucci
Director: Joe Johnston
Release Date: 22nd July 2011
During World War II, Steve Rogers (Evans) volunteers for a top secret research project that turns him into Captain America, a superhero dedicated to defending America’s ideals. His enhanced body enables him to survive being accidentally frozen for several decades. He is thawed in the present day, where he continues his fight with skull-faced Nazi ‘Red Skull’ (Weaving). This is Marvel’s first period movie then, at least in part. Chris Evans was a surprising choice, since he was already known for playing the much-more-physically-suited-to-him Johnny Storm in The Fantastic Four. Most now accept Evans as Cap. But not all. We’d be more relaxed if director Joe Johnston’s last movie The Wolfman wasn’t an expensive mess. Why isn’t this being released on July 4th?
Mission Impossible 4
Starring: Tom Cruise, Jeremy Renner, Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg, Josh Holloway
Director: Brad Bird
Release Date: 16th December 2011
Remember the sofa jump on the MI:3 press tour and Cruise’s public dumping by Paramount? Well, they made up. JJ Abrams, who directed the third movie, stays on board as producer, giving helming duties to Brad Bird (The Incredibles, Ratatouille). It’s a risky choice of director, the last live-action leap made by a Pixar pro gave us Jonah Hex. The villains are played by Michael Nyqvist (09′s Girl With The Dragon Tattoo) Léa Seydoux (Inglourious Basterds) and Anil Kapoor (Slumdog Millionaire). Hopefully Mission Impossible 4 will remember it’s about the team not the individual (MI:2) and not get sidetracked by boring girlfriend issues (MI:3).
The Hangover 2
Starring: Bradley Cooper, Zach Galifianakis, Ed Helms, Justin Bartha, Ken Jeong
Director: Todd Phillips (The Hangover)
Release Date: 26th May 2011
The gang are heading to Thailand. It’s rumoured that the plot revolves around dentist Stu sleeping with a Thai ladyboy. The first movie deserved its success, working as both a laugh out loud comedy and fun unpredictable mystery. In order to keep the original characters in this one (including the Korean gangster), and have the scenario repeat itself, expect unlikely coincidence to be pushed well beyond where it was in the first movie.
The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (U.S. Remake)
Starring: Rooney Mara, Daniel Craig, Stellan Skarsgård, Robin Wright, Julian Sands
Director: David Fincher
Release Date: 21st December 2011
Director David Fincher’s on fire after The Social Network and he’s cast the woman who played Zuckerberg’s girlfriend as the lead in this remake of the Swedish phenomenon. It’s based on the first in a series of three novels penned by an author who died before they were published. Dragon Tattoo is a detective story about a disgraced journalist (Daniel Craig) searching for a long-missing woman, assisted by an emo hacker with serious man issues. I didn’t find the Swedish original much better than your average Ashley Judd/Morgan Freeman thriller. I doubt the material would have attracted someone of Fincher’s talent without the huge following it has. P.S. The vital-to-the-mystery family tree in the Swedish original was confusing, hope they sort that out.
Rise Of The Apes
Starring: James Franco, Freida Pinto, Andy Serkis, Tom Felton, Brian Cox, John Lithgow
Director: Rupert Wyatt (The Escapist)
Release Date: 24th June 2011
It’s the prequel/reboot that nobody asked for. Rise is an origin story set in present day San Francisco, where experiments with genetic engineering create intelligent apes and trigger a war for supremacy. It’s primarily about the relationship between Dr. Rodman (Franco), who’s trying to find the cure for his father’s Alzheimer, and the most developed ape, Caesar. Sounds like a mega budget Monkey Shines. It will be interesting to see Tom Felton in a large non-Draco role, although he is still playing a evil son, this time his evil daddy is Brian Cox. We didn’t think much of Burton’s Planet Of The Apes, but this is a different kind of movie. Andy Serkis is playing a monkey, of course.
Transformers: The Dark Of The Moon (Transformers 3)
Starring: Shia LaBeouf, Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, Josh Duhamel, Patrick Dempsey
Director: Michael Bay
Release Date: 1st July 2011
Megan Fox’s public insulting of Michael Bay has led to her getting fired from the series and replaced by newcomer-model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, who plays Carly. The plot revolves around the space race and how The Transformers were involved in it right from the beginning. So real 60s history is being rewritten. Will it turn out Megatron assassinated JFK? We were left exhausted and bored by Transformers 2, this series is so inherently cool we’re waiting for someone else to take charge and concentrate on the interplay between the Transformers rather than Shia LaBeouf trying to score and hiding under a table.
Source: http://www.movie-moron.com/?p=13779
20. The Green Hornet
Starring: Seth Rogen, Cameron Diaz, Christoph Waltz
Director: Michel Gondry (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind)
Release Date: 14th January 2011
First up is a comic book adaptation (of which there are many on this list) from wacky director Michel Gondry. Anticipation was a little higher for this before the trailer hit, if only because we all assumed it would be more outlandish than it appears to be, but it still looks like a nicely executed superhero flick. If anything, it seems somewhat reminiscent of Iron Man, in terms of having a strong personality (in this case Seth Rogen) in the central role to give a piece of standard fare that added verve. Also looking good is Kato-vision, as seen at 2:05 in the trailer. We’re being optimistic. It’s potentially the best superhero bromance to ever hit our screens.
19. Fright Night
Starring: Anton Yelchin, Colin Farrell, David Tennant, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Toni Collette
Director: Craig Gillespie (Lars and the Real Girl)
Release Date: 7th October 2011
Star Trek’s Anton Yelchin is Charley Brewster, the young man trying to convince everyone that a murderous vampire (Colin Farrell) has moved in next door. He turns to gothic TV celebrity Peter Vincent (David Tennant) only to find he’s not the tough vampire hunter he portrays. Christopher Mintz-Plasse is Charley’s best friend ‘Evil’ Ed, and Toni Collette plays the mum. The 80s original was an enjoyable, well written comedy horror. This has upped the stakes with a near perfect cast of fun actors.
18. Cowboys And Aliens
Starring: Daniel Craig, Olivia Wilde, Harrison Ford, Sam Rockwell
Director: Jon Favreau
Release Date: 29th July 2011
Most people were sold on this movie on its title alone – it’s about as high concept as it gets. Cowboys. Aliens. Throw in James Bond, Indiana Jones and Miss Tron and you have the kind of movie that makes the crowds at SDCC go nuts:
It’s telling that there was virtually no talk about the movie on that panel…I guess there’s always next year. Director Jon Favreau was hot off of Iron Man when first attached to the project, but now, coming off of the lukewarm reception to the somewhat disappointing Iron Man 2, we’re hoping for a return to form. ‘Lost’ scribe Damon Lindelof has helped out in the writing department, so we’re hoping his nerdcore sensibilities shine through too. Cowboys. Aliens.
17. Thor
Starring: Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman, Anthony Hopkins, Tom Hiddleston, Rene Russo
Director: Kenneth Branagh
Release Date: 29th July 2011
With the mighty Thor hitting theatres, we are one step closer to The Avengers, which we’ve been impatiently waiting for since a badass in an eyepatch broke into Tony Stark’s house. But more than just a stepping stone to a bigger picture, Thor is a different breed of Superhero movie. Sure, there’s a cape or two, and people punch things in the name of truth and justice, but the mythic side of Thor is pretty much unprecedented in the world of superhero movies, and now that we’ve seen stills and that leaked SDCC trailer, we could not be more excited to see what the god of thunder has in store for us.
16. Don’t Be Afraid Of The Dark
Starring: Bailee Madison, Guy Pearce, Katie Holmes
Director: Troy Nixey (first timer, Guillermo del Toro ‘protege’)
Release Date: TBC 2011
It’s a conventional horror premise – young girl sent to live with her father (Pearce), and new girlfriend, discovers creatures in the home who want to claim her as one of their own. But the presence of Guillermo del Toro as hands-on co-writer/co-producer should elevate this to something genuinely unnerving. The filmmakers were going for a PG-13 but got rated R for ‘pervasive scariness.’ It’s a remake of a 1973 made-for-TV film that few will remember. Good to see Guy Pearce getting some mainstream work again.
15. The Adventures Of Tintin: The Secret Of The Unicorn
Starring: Jamie Bell, Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Daniel Craig, Andy Serkis
Director: Steven Spielberg
Release Date: 23rd December 2011
The dream team of Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson are presenting us with an adaptation of Herge’s beloved comic book adventures of Tintin. The ginger-quiffed Belgian reporter is being portrayed by Jamie Bell, who previously collaborated with Peter Jackson on King Kong. You’ll never see Bell’s face though, because the whole thing is being done using the performance capture technology that made James Cameron’s Avatar possible. We’re curious to see what the 3D versions of Herge’s illustrations will look like, and intrigued to see what Spielberg does with the character and the technology. And Daniel Craig’s ‘camp bad guy’:
14. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1
Starring: Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, Taylor Lautner, Anna Kendrick
Director: Bill Condon (Dreamgirls)
Release Date: 18th November 2011
Boy, did we get moaned at for not having Twilight on our list last year. Well I hope you’re happy. Me? I’m confused. One of the votes in this Movie-Moron writers poll was for ‘Twishite: Breaking Dawn’ which was presumably a typo, and the other had the following to say: “2011 looks so crappy that I’d rather laugh and yawn through Twilight than watch most of that list.”
…so yeah. The further adventures of Edward Cullen and his (sort of) paramour – yeah, it’s a word, not just a band – make number 14 on our list. This one’s the craziest storyline of the bunch, leading up to werewolf Jacob falling in love with Bella’s highly intelligent baby vampire.
13. The Greatest Muppet Movie Ever Made
Starring: Jason Segel, Amy Adams, Charles Grodin, Steve Whitmire
Director: James Bobin
Release Date: 25th December 2011
Kermit and Co are like old friends. It’s been a long time since we saw them, and it’ll be a pleasure to see them on screen again – the silver screen is even better! With a working title like The Greatest Muppet Movie Ever Made, writer and star Jason Segel (Forgetting Sarah Marshall) is giving himself a lot to live up to – and that’s a good thing, he’s acknowledging the daunting task ahead of him introducing the Muppets to a whole new generation.
Segel is joined on the project by director James Bobin, an unfamiliar name perhaps, but he was instrumental in bringing us Sacha Baron Cohen’s colourful cast of characters (Ali G, Borat and Bruno) as well as all-singing all-moping Kiwi folk-comedy duo Flight of the Conchords. We can’t wait to see him help the Muppets put on a show to save their old theatre.
12. Contagion
Starring: Matt Damon, Kate Winslet, Marion Cotillard, Jude Law, Gwenyth Paltrow
Director: Steven Soderbergh
Release Date: 21st October 2011
Think Swine Flu: The Movie. Action-thriller about a deadly disease and the international team of doctors contracted by the Center for Disease Control to deal with the spread. It’s also about how information spreads virally in the internet age. Contagion is a global story, filming in 10 countries, described as ‘procedural’ yet ‘breakneck tense’. With Steven Soderbergh directing, a script by the writer of The Bourne Ultimatum, and a cast this strong, we’re confident it’ll be more along the lines of 1971′s brainy The Andromeda Strain than Dustin Hoffman’s Outbreak. Also Gwyneth Paltrow’s character is the first to contract the horrible disease, so that’ll be fun to watch.
11. Paul
Cast: Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Seth Rogen (voice), Jason Bateman, Kristen Wiig
Director: Greg Mottola
Release Date: 18th March 2011
Two British sci-fi geeks (Pegg and Frost) go on a road trip through America. On the way, they discover an escaped alien named ‘Paul’ (voiced by Seth Rogen) near Area 51. As they try to reunite him with his mother ship, they find Paul has many more opinions than your typical ET. You might expect Edgar Wright to be directing this, but instead it’s Greg Mottola (Superbad, Adventureland). Pegg, Frost and Mottola are guaranteed to provide a few laughs, despite the dull title and somewhat thin premise. And it’s great to see Nick Frost finally getting his Hollywood due, hope it’s not too late.
10. Sucker Punch
Starring: Emily Browning, Jon Hamm, Vanessa Hudgens
Director: Zack Snyder
Release Date: 25th March 2011
The first original movie from slow-mo supremo Zack Snyder. The director of the Dawn of the Dead, 300, Watchmen and that owl movie is taking us inside the mind of Babydoll, a young woman committed to to a mental institution who dreams up some pretty crazy stuff whilst inside (see trailer). This is supposedly set in the 1950s, so quite how her fantasy world comes off as a yet-to-be-invented Heavy Metal/anime hybrid remains to be seen. What we can already see is that Snyder’s visual flair is intact, and his female ensemble cast looks pretty kick ass hot insane. This is Snyder’s last chance to prove he can do good character work before he directs the Superman reboot.
9. X-Men: First Class
Starring: James McAvoy, Kevin Bacon, Michael Fassbender, Rose Byrne, January Jones
Director: Matthew Vaughn
Release Date: 3rd June 2011
The X-Men franchise wasn’t on the boil for long. Bryan Singer’s semi-good X-Men was the movie that kicked off the superhero boom at the turn of the century, its sequel remains one of the best superhero movies ever made, but the third movie was weak and spinoff Wolverine fared no better. But wait, here comes Matthew Vaughn, the director of the excellent Kick-Ass, to tackle an X-Men prequel. And Kevin Bacon is the villain. Ok they started shooting without a finished script. And the 60s set images look a bit Austin Powers. It’s hard to know how this will turn out, but there are more positives than negatives and we have a lot of faith in Vaughn.
8. Sherlock Holmes 2
Starring: Robert Downey Jr, Jude Law, Noomi Rapace, Jared Harris
Director: Guy Ritchie
Release Date: 16th December 2011
Guy Ritchie surprised a lot of people with the first Sherlock Holmes, a movie that was outside his comfort zone but managed to retain his sensibilities and be a fast paced, humourous adventure. In contrast to the staid adaptations of Holmes that have gone before, Ritchie managed to inject some real excitement into the proceedings. Unfortunately, because the movie wasn’t based on anything Conan Doyle had written, it deviated considerably from the structure of Holmes mysteries, and the actual mystery itself didn’t seem so important. But the interplay between all of the characters was great, Robert Downey Jr got to be Robert Downey Jr (which doesn’t seem to bother people) only this time with an English accent, and Jude Law got to shine for once in his supporting role as Watson. Now in the sequel the less-impressive Rachel McAdams is sidelined in favour of Noomi Rapace from The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, and Stephen Fry will play Holmes’ smarter-but-lazier older brother (great casting). Ritchie has already surprised everybody by casting Jared Harris (who impressed on TV’s Fringe and Mad Men) as Moriarty, despite persistent rumours that former Snatch collaborator Brad Pitt would be taking the role.
7. Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 2
Starring: Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson, Ralph Fiennes, Bill Nighy, John Hurt
Director: David Yates
Release Date: 15th July 2011
Some will be upset that this hasn’t been put higher on this list, but amongst the writers here there’s a feeling the series has dragged on for slightly too long (8 movies now). Nonetheless expect this to be a rousing finale to one of the most spectacular film series ever made. Harry, Ron, and Hermione go back to Hogwarts to find and destroy Voldemort’s final horcruxes, but when ‘Ol Snake Nose finds out about their mission you can expect to see school totally trashed by Harry and foe firing enough bolts at each other to keep local glaziers in work for years. In fact their fight sequence will reportedly expand on what’s witnessed in the book. Even though Part 1 missed out on 3D, Part 2 will probably be converted in time.
6. Green Lantern
Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Blake Lively, Mark Strong
Director: Martin Campbell (Casino Royale, Edge Of Darkness)
Release Date: 17th June 2011
The highest ranking comic book movie on our list is Green Lantern, the first major DC hero to hit the big screen that isn’t a bat, cat, or Kryptonian refugee. Coming to us from Casino Royale director Martin Campbell, Green Lantern, much like Thor, promises to show us a different side to superheroics and take us on a cosmic adventure. The story follows a test pilot who is given a ring by a dying alien which turns him into the Green Lantern, part of a collective who protect the galaxy from similarly powered villains. There have been a few voices of dissent about the casting of Ryan Reynolds – ignore them, he’s perfect for the role of Hal Jordan. The treatment for the sequel has already been ordered.
5. Scream 4
Starring: Neve Campbell, David Arquette, Courteney Cox, Emma Roberts
Director: Wes Craven
Release Date: 15th April 2011
Scream transformed the horror landscape when it came out in ’96, kicking off the second slasher cycle (the first was after Halloween) and bringing a truly unique tone to the genre. Brilliantly directed as it was, it was Kevin Williamson’s script that really was a cut above. Scream 2 was largely a success too. Then the studio stupidly booted Williamson for the third instalment and the result was something like a Scooby Doo episode. We’re excited about Scream 4 because Williamson is back, and there are 10 years of horror movies (from Asian ghost movies to torture porn) to riff off, in that clever but still frightening way. It’s going to be interesting to see how the clearly-too-old-to-be-doing-this cast (Neve Campbell, David Arquette, Courteney Cox) is melded with the new generation (Emma Roberts, Hayden Panettiere etc). Will they kill off Sidney Prescott?
4. The Cabin In The Woods
Starring: Chris Hemsworth, Jesse Williams, Amy Acker
Director: Drew Goddard
Release Date: 15th April 2011
Whedonites are legion. So having Joss Whedon produce and co-write the script is a good thing in terms of drumming up hype. And Cabin in the Woods promises a new take on a played out horror movie trope – the cabin in the woods. It’s directed by Drew Goddard, who was heavily involved with Lost and wrote Cloverfield. It stars Chris Hemsworth, the man who will be Thor. Shooting was finished a while ago but, like Bond, it’s caught in limbo by of MGM’s financial problems. The script is doing the rounds on the internet if you want to get a head start.
3. Super 8
Starring: Kyle Chandler, Elle Fanning
Director: J.J. Abrams
Release Date: TBC 2011
Godammit, Abrams. You’re doing it again. Remember how the hype for Cloverfield was fueled by furious speculation? How the starfleet uniforms from Star Trek were hidden from the world? Well, here’s J.J. Abrams’ Super 8. Another project shrouded in mystery. We know it’s heavily influenced by the films of producer Steven Spielberg, and that it involves Area 51. We know it involves a group of kids in 1979 playing around making movies with their Super 8 cameras who accidentally capture something sinister, possibly alien, on film. We know one of the stars is Elle Fanning, younger sister of Dakota.
The Movie Preview Critic has a few predictions about what the movie might have to offer, so it’ll be interesting to see how much he gets right:
(One wonders if the filmmakers even know what the movie is, since the creature was designed after the teaser trailer was released.)
2. Hugo Cabret
Starring: Asa Butterfield, Chloe Moretz, Jude Law, Sacha Baron Cohen, Ben Kingsley
Director: Martin Scorsese
Release Date: 9th December 2011
Hugo Cabret is a film of firsts. It is Martin Scorsese’s first children’s movie, it is Martin Scorsese’s first 3D movie, and it is Martin Scorsese’s first major release in ten years not to feature Leonardo DiCaprio. The official story of The Invention of Hugo Cabret is as follows: “Orphan, Clock Keeper, And Thief, 12 year old Hugo lives in the walls of a busy Paris train station, where his survival depends on secrets and anonymity. But when his world suddenly interlocks with an eccentric girl and the owner of a small toy booth in the train station, Hugo’s undercover life, and his most precious secret, are put in jeopardy. A cryptic drawing, a treasured notebook, a stolen key, a mechanical man, and a hidden message all come together…” You can see some of the illustrations from the book upon which the movie is based right here. The movie has the potential to be magical in every sense of the word (apart from the one that means real hocus pocus, of course), which is why id’s so high on our list.
1. The Thing
Starring: Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Joel Edgerton, Eric Christian Olsen
Director: Matthijs van Heijningen Jr.
Release Date: 29th April 2011
Why are we anticipating this so much? Because there’s still so much mileage in the concept (if they are smart filmmakers), the setting and idea haven’t really been revisited by other movies since, and seeing our favourite horror movie ‘prequelised’ decades later has a big curiosity appeal. The prequel has already dropped the ball on two unconventional, but key, elements that helped make the original so unique – the all male cast has gone (the lead is now a hot female who’s helicoptered in), and the large cast of 12 mostly older character-actors has been replaced by the conventional 7 younger characters. It’s asking a lot, but if The Thing prequel turns out to be the smart, well written whodunit mystery it should be, and it stays away from cgi for its creature fx, this will be the cinemagoing experience we at Movie-Moron.com enjoy the most this year. Fingers are firmly crossed.
MOVIES THAT DIDN’T MAKE OUR TOP 20, BUT YOU’LL PROBABLY BE EXCITED ABOUT
Pirates Of The Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
Starring: Johnny Depp, Ian McShane, Penélope Cruz, Geoffrey Rush
Director: Rob Marshall
Release Date: 20th May 2011
Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley are out. Johnny Depp and Geoffrey Rush are in. Good call. The story sees Jack Sparrow and Barbossa embark on a quest to find the elusive fountain of youth, only to discover that Blackbeard (McShane) and his daughter (Cruz) are after it too. There’s a new director, Rob Marshall, whose only non-musical was Memoirs of a Geisha. Hopefully they’ll keep the running time down and won’t let the plot get too bloated.
Fast Five (Fast & Furious 5)
Starring: Vin Diesel, Dwayne Johnson, Paul Walker, Jordana Brewster, Tyrese Gibson
Director: Justin Lin
Release Date: 29th April 2011
Fast & Furious (4) felt like a last role of the dice for Vin Diesel’s career as a leading man, but it paid off huge at the box office. So now he’s sticking around to be joined by Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson and the co-star of 2 Fast 2 Furious, Tyrese Gibson. The plot sees former cop Brian (Walker) and Mia (Brewster) break Dom out of custody and flee to Brazil where they must pull one last job to gain their freedom. But a hard-nosed federal agent (Johnson) is on their trail. The director handled the previous two instalments so you can expect much of the same, with a bit of samba.
World Invasion: Battle LA
Starring: Aaron Eckhart, Michelle Rodriguez, Michael Peña, Bridget Moynahan
Director: Justin Lin
Release Date: 11th March 2011
A Marine platoon faces off against an alien invasion in Los Angeles. The director of Darkness Falls and T’ C’ Massacre: The Beginning is shooting in the Saving Private Ryan handheld style. Hopefully this will be the Black Hawk Down + Independence Day – Jokes it promises. Think large alien ships similar to a Borg cube / Klingon war bird shooting helicopters out of the sky and 8 foot bi-ped creatures street-fighting with the army. The Comic-Con footage went down well. The movie’s probably fairly good as it put Liebesman in the running for the Superman job. At the moment the only footage online is this 3 second clip -
Captain America: The First Avenger
Starring: Chris Evans, Hugo Weaving, Tommy Lee Jones, Stanley Tucci
Director: Joe Johnston
Release Date: 22nd July 2011
During World War II, Steve Rogers (Evans) volunteers for a top secret research project that turns him into Captain America, a superhero dedicated to defending America’s ideals. His enhanced body enables him to survive being accidentally frozen for several decades. He is thawed in the present day, where he continues his fight with skull-faced Nazi ‘Red Skull’ (Weaving). This is Marvel’s first period movie then, at least in part. Chris Evans was a surprising choice, since he was already known for playing the much-more-physically-suited-to-him Johnny Storm in The Fantastic Four. Most now accept Evans as Cap. But not all. We’d be more relaxed if director Joe Johnston’s last movie The Wolfman wasn’t an expensive mess. Why isn’t this being released on July 4th?
Mission Impossible 4
Starring: Tom Cruise, Jeremy Renner, Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg, Josh Holloway
Director: Brad Bird
Release Date: 16th December 2011
Remember the sofa jump on the MI:3 press tour and Cruise’s public dumping by Paramount? Well, they made up. JJ Abrams, who directed the third movie, stays on board as producer, giving helming duties to Brad Bird (The Incredibles, Ratatouille). It’s a risky choice of director, the last live-action leap made by a Pixar pro gave us Jonah Hex. The villains are played by Michael Nyqvist (09′s Girl With The Dragon Tattoo) Léa Seydoux (Inglourious Basterds) and Anil Kapoor (Slumdog Millionaire). Hopefully Mission Impossible 4 will remember it’s about the team not the individual (MI:2) and not get sidetracked by boring girlfriend issues (MI:3).
The Hangover 2
Starring: Bradley Cooper, Zach Galifianakis, Ed Helms, Justin Bartha, Ken Jeong
Director: Todd Phillips (The Hangover)
Release Date: 26th May 2011
The gang are heading to Thailand. It’s rumoured that the plot revolves around dentist Stu sleeping with a Thai ladyboy. The first movie deserved its success, working as both a laugh out loud comedy and fun unpredictable mystery. In order to keep the original characters in this one (including the Korean gangster), and have the scenario repeat itself, expect unlikely coincidence to be pushed well beyond where it was in the first movie.
The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (U.S. Remake)
Starring: Rooney Mara, Daniel Craig, Stellan Skarsgård, Robin Wright, Julian Sands
Director: David Fincher
Release Date: 21st December 2011
Director David Fincher’s on fire after The Social Network and he’s cast the woman who played Zuckerberg’s girlfriend as the lead in this remake of the Swedish phenomenon. It’s based on the first in a series of three novels penned by an author who died before they were published. Dragon Tattoo is a detective story about a disgraced journalist (Daniel Craig) searching for a long-missing woman, assisted by an emo hacker with serious man issues. I didn’t find the Swedish original much better than your average Ashley Judd/Morgan Freeman thriller. I doubt the material would have attracted someone of Fincher’s talent without the huge following it has. P.S. The vital-to-the-mystery family tree in the Swedish original was confusing, hope they sort that out.
Rise Of The Apes
Starring: James Franco, Freida Pinto, Andy Serkis, Tom Felton, Brian Cox, John Lithgow
Director: Rupert Wyatt (The Escapist)
Release Date: 24th June 2011
It’s the prequel/reboot that nobody asked for. Rise is an origin story set in present day San Francisco, where experiments with genetic engineering create intelligent apes and trigger a war for supremacy. It’s primarily about the relationship between Dr. Rodman (Franco), who’s trying to find the cure for his father’s Alzheimer, and the most developed ape, Caesar. Sounds like a mega budget Monkey Shines. It will be interesting to see Tom Felton in a large non-Draco role, although he is still playing a evil son, this time his evil daddy is Brian Cox. We didn’t think much of Burton’s Planet Of The Apes, but this is a different kind of movie. Andy Serkis is playing a monkey, of course.
Transformers: The Dark Of The Moon (Transformers 3)
Starring: Shia LaBeouf, Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, Josh Duhamel, Patrick Dempsey
Director: Michael Bay
Release Date: 1st July 2011
Megan Fox’s public insulting of Michael Bay has led to her getting fired from the series and replaced by newcomer-model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, who plays Carly. The plot revolves around the space race and how The Transformers were involved in it right from the beginning. So real 60s history is being rewritten. Will it turn out Megatron assassinated JFK? We were left exhausted and bored by Transformers 2, this series is so inherently cool we’re waiting for someone else to take charge and concentrate on the interplay between the Transformers rather than Shia LaBeouf trying to score and hiding under a table.
Source: http://www.movie-moron.com/?p=13779
Sunday, November 21, 2010
India, the Asian Games and Indian Sports
Admittedly this hasn’t been the greatest Asian Games so far for India and we would be hard pressed to even match our performance in Doha four years ago. However, there have been some positives that get me enthused about India’s chances going forward in the not too distant future.
To start off, India won a couple of medals in disciplines that India was never considered to have even an outside chance in. Two Indian boys won us medals in swimming and gymnastics where even I, as an eternal optimist, has since long felt that we were yet not competitive enough to win anything at the Asian level. Oh boy, am I glad to be wrong and wouldn’t I be just delighted to be wrong on these more often.
So far China has completely decimated the competition and it seems as if most of the others are just competing for the silver and bronze medals. China's gold medal tally is more than its silver and bronze medal count combined and China got more medals in the first six hours then India’s overall medal at the end of 9th day of the Games as I write this.
I have a epiphany of sorts as I write this piece that when I reminiscent on this blog again after 16 years, roughly at the closing stages of the fourth Asian Games after this current one, I see Indian and China going head to head for the most gold and I hope India gives China a hell of fight that China quakes in its boot and romanticize on the days of their complete dominance.
Guys, won’t it be a great day for India and a proud day for us all. By that time I also want India to be preparing to host the Olympics Games and give shape to the greatest Games ever
Getting back to the present though, the reality is much different and we have to take whatever we can from the present and build on it in the future.
On a positive note, I just have had a great evening watching Indian women winning 2 golds for India in the middle and long distance races on the first day of the track and field events where India has managed to match China’s tally. By matching I mean, so far at least. I also have a premonition here that there are some more gold medals still to be had for India in the track and field.
Today has been in fact the best day for India at the Games with one gold in the shooting range at last and two on the track and field as I said earlier. Our performance in shooting though has been a tad disappointing considering the pedigree we have in the sport, but better late than never I say.
Today, the Indian women archers also did India proud when they so nearly toppled the favorites South Korea which was mesmerizing to see. We were on the verge of beating them, but one shot cost us victory and we lost the match in a tiebreaker. The Koreans went on to eventually win the Gold and left me pondering on what could have been.
I really am proud of the girls who in the end won the Bronze coming back from behind to win a nail biting thriller over the Taipei team who lost focus and were at times getting too confident for their own good. I see in the Indian girls the potential to be real world beaters if they go on and build on the potential they showed here and are able to keep their emotions in check and handle the pressure better. I wouldn’t also be surprised if we do well at the individual competition at archery.
We can hope for some more medals coming from wrestling, boxing and tennis, but track and field holds the greatest promise.
Looking at the performance at some of the more un-fancied sports, I am optimistic of India’s chances in these sports in the coming time. All we need is a commitment to building up a sports culture and when you consider the size and population of India, we have many world and Olympic champions just waiting to be burst on the scene.
I today prophesize that India’s financial, strategic and political influence in the world would be mirrored by its performance in the world of sports and we are already seeing that in a number of sports where we have more world champions and world number 1 emerging.
China is set to have a greater challenger than what Asia has been able to offer so far and I also have no doubt that China also recognized the threat that India is destined to offer in the future and are already working towards minimizing the repercussions.
Saina Nehwal has already put a serious dent on the Chinese aura of invincibility and it is no coincidence that there are at least 10 cameras covering her every move so that the Chinese could work on her weakness prior hand and potentially prevent an Indian supremacy in what has so far been a Chinese bastion.
I only hope that Indian sports administrators take sports just as seriously as the Chinese clearly do. There is so much that the dragon nation could teach the slumbering elephant, pardon the clichéd use of analogies, but the fact of the matter is that Chinese are already preparing for an Indian onslaught, which although maybe years out, makes you marvel at the Chinese preparation and dedication.
But one thing I have to admit, I much better see the Chinese win on the world stage which is the strongest developing nation in the world rather than see the old barons of the sporting world dominate again and again. Many might ask why do I support China, but my thinking on this matter goes like this; what the Chinese can achieve today is a precursor to what India is poised to achieve tomorrow.
I just can’t wait for India to win some more medals tomorrow. Go India go. I know I’ll be cheering. I am sure you all will be too.
To start off, India won a couple of medals in disciplines that India was never considered to have even an outside chance in. Two Indian boys won us medals in swimming and gymnastics where even I, as an eternal optimist, has since long felt that we were yet not competitive enough to win anything at the Asian level. Oh boy, am I glad to be wrong and wouldn’t I be just delighted to be wrong on these more often.
So far China has completely decimated the competition and it seems as if most of the others are just competing for the silver and bronze medals. China's gold medal tally is more than its silver and bronze medal count combined and China got more medals in the first six hours then India’s overall medal at the end of 9th day of the Games as I write this.
I have a epiphany of sorts as I write this piece that when I reminiscent on this blog again after 16 years, roughly at the closing stages of the fourth Asian Games after this current one, I see Indian and China going head to head for the most gold and I hope India gives China a hell of fight that China quakes in its boot and romanticize on the days of their complete dominance.
Guys, won’t it be a great day for India and a proud day for us all. By that time I also want India to be preparing to host the Olympics Games and give shape to the greatest Games ever
Getting back to the present though, the reality is much different and we have to take whatever we can from the present and build on it in the future.
On a positive note, I just have had a great evening watching Indian women winning 2 golds for India in the middle and long distance races on the first day of the track and field events where India has managed to match China’s tally. By matching I mean, so far at least. I also have a premonition here that there are some more gold medals still to be had for India in the track and field.
Today has been in fact the best day for India at the Games with one gold in the shooting range at last and two on the track and field as I said earlier. Our performance in shooting though has been a tad disappointing considering the pedigree we have in the sport, but better late than never I say.
Today, the Indian women archers also did India proud when they so nearly toppled the favorites South Korea which was mesmerizing to see. We were on the verge of beating them, but one shot cost us victory and we lost the match in a tiebreaker. The Koreans went on to eventually win the Gold and left me pondering on what could have been.
I really am proud of the girls who in the end won the Bronze coming back from behind to win a nail biting thriller over the Taipei team who lost focus and were at times getting too confident for their own good. I see in the Indian girls the potential to be real world beaters if they go on and build on the potential they showed here and are able to keep their emotions in check and handle the pressure better. I wouldn’t also be surprised if we do well at the individual competition at archery.
We can hope for some more medals coming from wrestling, boxing and tennis, but track and field holds the greatest promise.
Looking at the performance at some of the more un-fancied sports, I am optimistic of India’s chances in these sports in the coming time. All we need is a commitment to building up a sports culture and when you consider the size and population of India, we have many world and Olympic champions just waiting to be burst on the scene.
I today prophesize that India’s financial, strategic and political influence in the world would be mirrored by its performance in the world of sports and we are already seeing that in a number of sports where we have more world champions and world number 1 emerging.
China is set to have a greater challenger than what Asia has been able to offer so far and I also have no doubt that China also recognized the threat that India is destined to offer in the future and are already working towards minimizing the repercussions.
Saina Nehwal has already put a serious dent on the Chinese aura of invincibility and it is no coincidence that there are at least 10 cameras covering her every move so that the Chinese could work on her weakness prior hand and potentially prevent an Indian supremacy in what has so far been a Chinese bastion.
I only hope that Indian sports administrators take sports just as seriously as the Chinese clearly do. There is so much that the dragon nation could teach the slumbering elephant, pardon the clichéd use of analogies, but the fact of the matter is that Chinese are already preparing for an Indian onslaught, which although maybe years out, makes you marvel at the Chinese preparation and dedication.
But one thing I have to admit, I much better see the Chinese win on the world stage which is the strongest developing nation in the world rather than see the old barons of the sporting world dominate again and again. Many might ask why do I support China, but my thinking on this matter goes like this; what the Chinese can achieve today is a precursor to what India is poised to achieve tomorrow.
I just can’t wait for India to win some more medals tomorrow. Go India go. I know I’ll be cheering. I am sure you all will be too.
Friday, November 19, 2010
Chinese Millennium on the Anvil
After seeing China cross the 100 gold medal mark at the Asian Games 2010, I wondered whether the shiny metal might end up losing its charm amidst such a gold rush. But I was quickly convinced that it won't, especially when it comes to the Chinese for whom gold medals at the Games is just another way of displaying its supremacy in a world where the best way to exhibit one's might is through 'Soft Power.'
China takes the display of this Soft Power very seriously and has left no stone unturned in its effort to showcase to the world what it is capable of and let the world know it’s a force to be reckoned with not just financially and militarily, but through the influence that it has on others when it comes to sports and implied cultural ascendancy using Soft Power as a leverage. It's much easier to convince others if the speaking is done by your actions rather than wasting a lot of time verbally confusing many and convincing none.
The Chinese success in hosting the Olympics and the Asian Games with its trademark management skills, clinical efficiency and clockwork precision manifested beautifully by the awe inspiring opening and closing ceremony at both the Games made the world stand up and take notice. It was just another feather in an already boisterous cap that the Chinese so proudly parade to the world in a mild conjuncture that the world has started to acknowledge.
It is the Chinese way of saying, "It is our time now. The West has had their 30 second of fame and it's the Chinese millennium from here on in." I am sure that Indian, Japan, and not to mention the U.S. might have something to say about that, but there is no doubt that no one is taking the Chinese claims lightly. Although Indian shouldn’t rest on its laurels and see China surge ahead, there is no better illustration or a case study that Indian could ask for and I am sure Indian, the other developing countries, and even the developed countries could do very well to emulate, at least emulate what China has done right so far.
Although China is still far from being perfect through its dismal human rights record, pathetic pollution track record and an autocratic and even hegemonic mentality to its policies in world finance and politics, no other country is better poised to take over the mantle as the next superpower. Trust me, I say that with a heavy heart being an Indian, but it's the reality of our times and is something that we have to make peace with.
The Dragon is flying high, but it has to be careful as the weather could turn anytime and even a Dragon needs to be careful and watch its back. But as of now, it's China all the way whether we like it or not.
China takes the display of this Soft Power very seriously and has left no stone unturned in its effort to showcase to the world what it is capable of and let the world know it’s a force to be reckoned with not just financially and militarily, but through the influence that it has on others when it comes to sports and implied cultural ascendancy using Soft Power as a leverage. It's much easier to convince others if the speaking is done by your actions rather than wasting a lot of time verbally confusing many and convincing none.
The Chinese success in hosting the Olympics and the Asian Games with its trademark management skills, clinical efficiency and clockwork precision manifested beautifully by the awe inspiring opening and closing ceremony at both the Games made the world stand up and take notice. It was just another feather in an already boisterous cap that the Chinese so proudly parade to the world in a mild conjuncture that the world has started to acknowledge.
It is the Chinese way of saying, "It is our time now. The West has had their 30 second of fame and it's the Chinese millennium from here on in." I am sure that Indian, Japan, and not to mention the U.S. might have something to say about that, but there is no doubt that no one is taking the Chinese claims lightly. Although Indian shouldn’t rest on its laurels and see China surge ahead, there is no better illustration or a case study that Indian could ask for and I am sure Indian, the other developing countries, and even the developed countries could do very well to emulate, at least emulate what China has done right so far.
Although China is still far from being perfect through its dismal human rights record, pathetic pollution track record and an autocratic and even hegemonic mentality to its policies in world finance and politics, no other country is better poised to take over the mantle as the next superpower. Trust me, I say that with a heavy heart being an Indian, but it's the reality of our times and is something that we have to make peace with.
The Dragon is flying high, but it has to be careful as the weather could turn anytime and even a Dragon needs to be careful and watch its back. But as of now, it's China all the way whether we like it or not.
Monday, November 8, 2010
President Obama's Visit to India - Short Synopsis
So far President Obama has been brutally honest as to his views on India-US relations, which I must say is a refreshing and assuring change from the rhetorical Clinton or the paradoxical Bush. That doesnt mean he'll be good for India or anyone else for that matter, but atleast we'll knw what's coming and prepare for the challenges alone if need be, which we are more than capable of doing!!
So, Mr. Obama, your honesty is appreciated but it's no longer about what 'you can' anymore. It's more about what you did and how you did it!! Anyway, thanks for the nice moves on the Koli number. But so far, that has been the highlight of your visit. However, I am still all ears for your exemplary oratory skills but with some positive connotations as far as India and the Subcontinent as a whole is concerned!
So, Mr. Obama, your honesty is appreciated but it's no longer about what 'you can' anymore. It's more about what you did and how you did it!! Anyway, thanks for the nice moves on the Koli number. But so far, that has been the highlight of your visit. However, I am still all ears for your exemplary oratory skills but with some positive connotations as far as India and the Subcontinent as a whole is concerned!
Monday, November 1, 2010
What You Mean to Me..........
If beauty had an allure, you are its personification.
If life had a reason to spawn, you are its sustenance.
If god had a purpose in the consciousness, you are its conviction.
If melody has a rhythm, you are its most lyrical beat.
If holiness has a spiritual calm to it, you gave it providence.
If nature had a balance, you fill it with sanctity.
If truth had no equal, you give it credibility.
If diamonds are forever, you give it the glitter.
If conscious is clear, you give it its voice.
If motion is energy, you give it the right direction.
If living is learning, you make it discernible.
If democracy is fair, you give it a reality.
If love is life, you fill it with romance.
If my life has a reason, you are its most beautiful proof.
Note: These stanzas are my testimony to those who have felt love and eloquote this feeling into text. If you have something better and would like to add, gladly do so!!! I am all ears. Correction, all eyes!!!! :) Till then, spread love brothers and sisters!!! We can never have enough of it!! By the way, this is my 300th post. Yippeeee!!!!
If life had a reason to spawn, you are its sustenance.
If god had a purpose in the consciousness, you are its conviction.
If melody has a rhythm, you are its most lyrical beat.
If holiness has a spiritual calm to it, you gave it providence.
If nature had a balance, you fill it with sanctity.
If truth had no equal, you give it credibility.
If diamonds are forever, you give it the glitter.
If conscious is clear, you give it its voice.
If motion is energy, you give it the right direction.
If living is learning, you make it discernible.
If democracy is fair, you give it a reality.
If love is life, you fill it with romance.
If my life has a reason, you are its most beautiful proof.
Note: These stanzas are my testimony to those who have felt love and eloquote this feeling into text. If you have something better and would like to add, gladly do so!!! I am all ears. Correction, all eyes!!!! :) Till then, spread love brothers and sisters!!! We can never have enough of it!! By the way, this is my 300th post. Yippeeee!!!!
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Why Poetry?
Why this urge to put my words into rhyme,
Why feel this need to make my feelings hum?
Why does prose seem a task strenuous on the mind?
Is it my lack of patience or a reflection of our time.
Are we too busy for words that seem plenty but linger at best,
Too occupied to appreciate the beauty of a detailed text?
Or is poetry a way to say much through so less,
Where many emotions are expressed and others genuinely felt.
Are both form of expression a part of a seamless and wonderful whole,
Are there times when both come together towards a greater shared goal.
For days I strained for the obvious and allowed lethargy to choose one over the other.
Preferring one of the sibling so unique yet crucial borne out of a common mother.
It was me all along who chose to ignore the significance of both,
The role of prose and poetry for true literary growth.
So many days lost and growth hindered that still may prove hard to compensate.
But lessons were learned and feel eager to start over as it's never too late!!!!!
Why feel this need to make my feelings hum?
Why does prose seem a task strenuous on the mind?
Is it my lack of patience or a reflection of our time.
Are we too busy for words that seem plenty but linger at best,
Too occupied to appreciate the beauty of a detailed text?
Or is poetry a way to say much through so less,
Where many emotions are expressed and others genuinely felt.
Are both form of expression a part of a seamless and wonderful whole,
Are there times when both come together towards a greater shared goal.
For days I strained for the obvious and allowed lethargy to choose one over the other.
Preferring one of the sibling so unique yet crucial borne out of a common mother.
It was me all along who chose to ignore the significance of both,
The role of prose and poetry for true literary growth.
So many days lost and growth hindered that still may prove hard to compensate.
But lessons were learned and feel eager to start over as it's never too late!!!!!
What Memories Mean?
Life is a concoction of memories accumulated in random,
events and episodes either planned or that transpire in unforeseen tandem.
The more memories you hold onto signifies a life well spent,
memories are one's true evidence of success and its only genuine testament.
Don't let life be left in cruise control and allow it become all but mechanical,
don't ignore the spirits of celebration and let life assume a sabbatical.
Be instinctive and cherish the uncertainties with fervor and passion,
and witness the wondrous joy of life that grows greater every season.
If we only could appreciate what life has to offer,
what it has in store in its unassuming and viscous coffer.
It is important to recognize that life is an art of living and not just an excuse to exist,
and if survival is presumed primary above all, then life is nothing but a glorified forfeit.
events and episodes either planned or that transpire in unforeseen tandem.
The more memories you hold onto signifies a life well spent,
memories are one's true evidence of success and its only genuine testament.
Don't let life be left in cruise control and allow it become all but mechanical,
don't ignore the spirits of celebration and let life assume a sabbatical.
Be instinctive and cherish the uncertainties with fervor and passion,
and witness the wondrous joy of life that grows greater every season.
If we only could appreciate what life has to offer,
what it has in store in its unassuming and viscous coffer.
It is important to recognize that life is an art of living and not just an excuse to exist,
and if survival is presumed primary above all, then life is nothing but a glorified forfeit.
Sunday, August 15, 2010
Me, and the new Change!!!!
Almost everyone I know is weary of sudden change,
Inclined towards caution when faced with transition.
Every step is conservative and carefully calculated,
Guarded against any wrong moves or being manipulated.
It may seem as if these apprehensions are bordering on panic,
However, you suppress these feelings and conquer any reason.
Usually, this is how things go, but I was in for a pleasant surprise.
Somehow this transition felt pleasantly homely without much try.
It didn’t know what did the trick but I didn’t complain,
Everyday things got better and my lethargy started to drain.
It is now clear that it was the wonderful people who helped subdue my negativity,
Who made me feel secure and confident with their kindness and selfless propensity.
A realization soon struck me as to why change is constant and growth a necessity,
Why change is a precursor to progress and a feeler for our destined prosperity.
Today I feel part of something bigger and part of a greater whole.
I believe a bond now runs through us caressing all our tethered soul.
We all believe we are poised towards attaining something genuinely great,
Working towards a common dream as a team where everyone participates.
There is a positive spirit that I sense but cannot yet fathom,
A drive that urges all of us to push beyond our immediate horizon.
I’m proud to say that no goal nor dream seems a bridge too far,
Now, that I stand shoulder-to-shoulder as part of ‘Team Morningstar’.
Inclined towards caution when faced with transition.
Every step is conservative and carefully calculated,
Guarded against any wrong moves or being manipulated.
It may seem as if these apprehensions are bordering on panic,
However, you suppress these feelings and conquer any reason.
Usually, this is how things go, but I was in for a pleasant surprise.
Somehow this transition felt pleasantly homely without much try.
It didn’t know what did the trick but I didn’t complain,
Everyday things got better and my lethargy started to drain.
It is now clear that it was the wonderful people who helped subdue my negativity,
Who made me feel secure and confident with their kindness and selfless propensity.
A realization soon struck me as to why change is constant and growth a necessity,
Why change is a precursor to progress and a feeler for our destined prosperity.
Today I feel part of something bigger and part of a greater whole.
I believe a bond now runs through us caressing all our tethered soul.
We all believe we are poised towards attaining something genuinely great,
Working towards a common dream as a team where everyone participates.
There is a positive spirit that I sense but cannot yet fathom,
A drive that urges all of us to push beyond our immediate horizon.
I’m proud to say that no goal nor dream seems a bridge too far,
Now, that I stand shoulder-to-shoulder as part of ‘Team Morningstar’.
Friday, June 11, 2010
Cricket Australia considers new 40-over format
Australia is all set to revolutionize the 50-Over per side by splitting it into two innings each. That means watching the Great Sachin bat twice and enjoying the sight of Steyn charging-in in two different innings in one day. Wow!!! That's an exciting prospect. Cant' wait.
Cricket Australia considers new 40-over format
Cricket Australia considers new 40-over format
Monday, June 7, 2010
Makhaya Ntini - On a Mission to Unearth more hidden talent!!
Link: Cricinfo Article - Worth a Read!
Go Ntini go. We as lovers of quality cricket have always craved high-quality crickets like the hay days of old when quality cricketers seem to be produced from every country with alarming ease and there was a real battle to be called the number one. The production line seemed to be exhausted for some reason, even in South Africa, a country that gave us some real gems. Also, the number of colored cricketers is not great and you see a lot of quality white cricketers leaving the country sighting unfair selection process. This seems to be doing no good for anyone.
Anyway, good luck with your initiative Makhaya. Let us hope we'll see more cricketers exhibit the same spirit and commitment that you displayed with distinguishment. Can't wait to see a big, tall, fiery fast ballers emerge from the Rainbow Nation and beyond. It can only help cricket as a whole. Nice Article!
Go Ntini go. We as lovers of quality cricket have always craved high-quality crickets like the hay days of old when quality cricketers seem to be produced from every country with alarming ease and there was a real battle to be called the number one. The production line seemed to be exhausted for some reason, even in South Africa, a country that gave us some real gems. Also, the number of colored cricketers is not great and you see a lot of quality white cricketers leaving the country sighting unfair selection process. This seems to be doing no good for anyone.
Anyway, good luck with your initiative Makhaya. Let us hope we'll see more cricketers exhibit the same spirit and commitment that you displayed with distinguishment. Can't wait to see a big, tall, fiery fast ballers emerge from the Rainbow Nation and beyond. It can only help cricket as a whole. Nice Article!
Friday, April 23, 2010
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