Upcoming Movie Trailers and Summaries
New movie trailers, latest feedback and comments and hot gossips
Friday, August 24, 2012
Resident Evil: Retribution
Resident Evil: Retribution
In Movie Theaters: September 14, 2012 NationwideDirected by: Paul W.S. Anderson
Starring:
more credits Milla Jovovich ... Alice
Michelle Rodriguez
Johann Urb
Boris Kodjoe
Shawn Roberts
Sienna Guillory
Distributed by: Sony Screen Gems
Running Time: 117 minutes
MPAA Rating: R for sequences of strong violence throughout.
Synopsis: The Umbrella Corporation’s deadly T-virus continues to ravage the Earth, transforming the global population into legions of the flesh eating Undead. The human race’s last and only hope, ALICE (Milla Jovovich), awakens in the heart of Umbrella's most clandestine operations facility and unveils more of her mysterious past as she delves further into the complex. Without a safe haven, Alice continues to hunt those responsible for the outbreak; a chase that takes her from Tokyo to New York, Washington, D.C. and Moscow, culminating in a mind-blowing revelation that will force her to rethink everything that she once thought to be true. Aided by newfound allies and familiar friends, Alice must fight to survive long enough to escape a hostile world on the brink of oblivion. The countdown has begun.
Trailer:
The movie is a 3D science-fiction 'zombie-apocalypse' action horror film written and directed by Paul W. S. Anderson and starring Milla Jovovich once again as the lead, Alice. It is the fifth installment in the "Resident Evil" film series and the third to be directed by Anderson. The films are based on the Capcom survival horror series "Resident Evil"
| Cast | Credit |
|---|---|
| Amanda Dyar | Umbrella Employee Zombie |
| Aryana Engineer | Becky |
| Bingbing Li | Ada Wong |
| Boris Kodjoe | Luther West |
| Chris Sullins | Window Zombie |
| Colin Salmon | James One Shade |
| Johann Urb | Leon Kennedy |
| Kevin Durand | Barry Burton |
| Megan Charpentier | Red Queen |
| Mika Nakashima | Undead |
| Oded Fehr | Carlos Olivera |
| Parys Sylver | Manuel |
| Shawn Roberts | Albert Wesker |
| Sienna Guillory | Jill Valentine |
| Producer | Credit |
|---|---|
| Alexander Dostal | Co-Producer |
| Don Carmody | Producer |
| Hartley Gorenstein | Line Producer |
| Jeremy Bolt | Producer |
| Paul W.S. Anderson | Producer |
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Girl Model
Release Date:
September 5, 2012 (NY)
Studio: First Run Features
Director: David Redmon, Ashley Sabin
Screenwriter: Not Available
Starring: Not Available
Genre: Documentary
MPAA Rating: Not Available
Official Website: FirstRunFeatures.com
Plot Summary: Despite a lack of obvious similarities between Siberia and Tokyo, a thriving model industry connects these distant regions. "Girl Model" follows two protagonists involved in this industry: Ashley, a deeply ambivalent model scout who scours the Siberian countryside looking for fresh faces to send to the Japanese market, and one of her discoveries, Nadya, a 13-year-old plucked from her rustic home in Russia and dropped into the center of bustling Tokyo with promises of a profitable career. After Ashley's initial discovery of Nadya, they rarely meet again, but their stories are inextricably bound. As Nadya's optimism about rescuing her family from financial hardship grows, her dreams contrast against Ashley's more jaded outlook about the industry's corrosive influence.
Trailer:
Studio: First Run Features
Director: David Redmon, Ashley Sabin
Screenwriter: Not Available
Starring: Not Available
Genre: Documentary
MPAA Rating: Not Available
Official Website: FirstRunFeatures.com
Plot Summary: Despite a lack of obvious similarities between Siberia and Tokyo, a thriving model industry connects these distant regions. "Girl Model" follows two protagonists involved in this industry: Ashley, a deeply ambivalent model scout who scours the Siberian countryside looking for fresh faces to send to the Japanese market, and one of her discoveries, Nadya, a 13-year-old plucked from her rustic home in Russia and dropped into the center of bustling Tokyo with promises of a profitable career. After Ashley's initial discovery of Nadya, they rarely meet again, but their stories are inextricably bound. As Nadya's optimism about rescuing her family from financial hardship grows, her dreams contrast against Ashley's more jaded outlook about the industry's corrosive influence.
Trailer:
For Ellen
Release Date:
September 5, 2012 (NY)
Studio: Tribeca Film
Director: So Yong Kim
Screenwriter: So Yong Kim
Starring: Paul Dano, Jon Heder, Shaylena Mandigo, Jena Malone, Margarita Levieva
Genre: Drama
Plot Summary: Aspiring rock star Joby Taylor (Paul Dano) has wanted nothing more than to “make it," having flirted with fame but never crossed over into true success. In the midst of a low period in his life, he agrees to sign divorce papers with his estranged wife (Margarita Levieva) in order to see money from the sale of their home, only to discover that by signing the papers, he will forfeit all custody of his six-year-old daughter, Ellen (newcomer Shaylena Mandigo). With a good-natured lawyer (Jon Heder- "Napoleon Dynamite") unable to make headway in reversing the decision, and a girlfriend (Jena Malone) that represents an era of his life that he might be ready to graduate from, Joby negotiates a visit with his daughter to explore whether he is able to walk away from his child, and whether it might be too late for reconciliation.
So Yong Kim (In Between Days, Treeless Mountain) is back at Sundance this year with For Ellen, a quiet, meticulously paced character study about Joby (Paul Dano), a would-be rock star , who takes a road trip back to the small midwest town where his soon-to-be ex and young daughter live so that he can sign divorce papers. Joby needs the financial settlement the divorce will give him in order to finish his latest album — which he sees as his last chance to make it or break it. Upon his arrival, though, he learns that his inept attorney (Jon Heder) has negotiated a settlement that will require him to give up all rights to the daughter he hasn’t seen since she was a baby. Faced with this choice, Joby’s suddenly he’s not so sure what he wants.
Kim has a patience as a director for allowing her characters to draw us in slowly but surely; she steers clear of emotional manipulation and even particularly structured plot points, and gives her actors room to just be — an approach that can be dicey depending on the talent, but that works very well here with Dano in the lead role. Cinematographer Reed Morano, who previously shot Frozen River, puts her talents to good use here as well. Like Frozen River, For Ellen is set in the winter, and long, slow shots of the cold, frozen Midwest landscape serve to evoke the emotional state of the characters: Joby, who’s struggling with whether it’s too late to connect with the daughter he abandoned; his ex Claire (Margarita Lievieva), whose painfully walled off emotional disconnect is a much more interesting way of conveying their personal history than any weighty expositional back story would have been, and Claire and Joby’s daughter, Ellen (Shaylena Mandigo), who eyes the sudden appearance of her father in her life with wary, curious watchfulness.
The lean script doesn’t invest a lot of energy on overt character development or history, nor does Kim guide her audience one way or another, particularly, in determining how they should feel about Joby. Joby’s just a guy like a lot of guys, who wasn’t ready for fatherhood; he had to make a choice between life on the road as a musician, or living in this stifling small town with his wife and daughter, and when it came down to it he chose to take what he saw as a singular opportunity to pursue the career he wanted.
This sparseness of back story makes Joby more relatable, and at least empathetic, if not entirely sympathetic. He is what he is: not the father Claire would have had him be; not the father Ellen would like him to be. Joby’s the guy who likes to be on the road, who darkens his soul patch with mascara in gas station bathrooms and drinks too much in too many cheap hotel rooms, not the guy who’s going to be there for his daughter’s piano recitals and skinned knees. But he’s also a musician, an artist feeling keenly his inability to break through to find success in the way he wants it, and that’s certainly something that anyone who aspires to take a chance and create rather than just do a mundane job to pay the bills can relate to. Artistic pursuit almost always requires some kind of sacrifice, and Joby’s made life choices that have already defined his path.
The press notes indicate that Kim created this story to explore her feelings about her own absent father, so in that sense perhaps she wanted to keep it a bit more abstract to allow room for individual interpretation, rather that spinning out a more specific story that judges her protagonist one way or another. Joby’s not quite a hero, not quite an antihero. He’s simply a mirror against which our own ideas of parenthood and responsibility refract, which for me, makes For Ellen a million times better than stories of a similar theme that try to tell us precisely what to think.
Studio: Tribeca Film
Director: So Yong Kim
Screenwriter: So Yong Kim
Starring: Paul Dano, Jon Heder, Shaylena Mandigo, Jena Malone, Margarita Levieva
Genre: Drama
Plot Summary: Aspiring rock star Joby Taylor (Paul Dano) has wanted nothing more than to “make it," having flirted with fame but never crossed over into true success. In the midst of a low period in his life, he agrees to sign divorce papers with his estranged wife (Margarita Levieva) in order to see money from the sale of their home, only to discover that by signing the papers, he will forfeit all custody of his six-year-old daughter, Ellen (newcomer Shaylena Mandigo). With a good-natured lawyer (Jon Heder- "Napoleon Dynamite") unable to make headway in reversing the decision, and a girlfriend (Jena Malone) that represents an era of his life that he might be ready to graduate from, Joby negotiates a visit with his daughter to explore whether he is able to walk away from his child, and whether it might be too late for reconciliation.
Review: For Ellen
So Yong Kim (In Between Days, Treeless Mountain) is back at Sundance this year with For Ellen, a quiet, meticulously paced character study about Joby (Paul Dano), a would-be rock star , who takes a road trip back to the small midwest town where his soon-to-be ex and young daughter live so that he can sign divorce papers. Joby needs the financial settlement the divorce will give him in order to finish his latest album — which he sees as his last chance to make it or break it. Upon his arrival, though, he learns that his inept attorney (Jon Heder) has negotiated a settlement that will require him to give up all rights to the daughter he hasn’t seen since she was a baby. Faced with this choice, Joby’s suddenly he’s not so sure what he wants.
Kim has a patience as a director for allowing her characters to draw us in slowly but surely; she steers clear of emotional manipulation and even particularly structured plot points, and gives her actors room to just be — an approach that can be dicey depending on the talent, but that works very well here with Dano in the lead role. Cinematographer Reed Morano, who previously shot Frozen River, puts her talents to good use here as well. Like Frozen River, For Ellen is set in the winter, and long, slow shots of the cold, frozen Midwest landscape serve to evoke the emotional state of the characters: Joby, who’s struggling with whether it’s too late to connect with the daughter he abandoned; his ex Claire (Margarita Lievieva), whose painfully walled off emotional disconnect is a much more interesting way of conveying their personal history than any weighty expositional back story would have been, and Claire and Joby’s daughter, Ellen (Shaylena Mandigo), who eyes the sudden appearance of her father in her life with wary, curious watchfulness.
The lean script doesn’t invest a lot of energy on overt character development or history, nor does Kim guide her audience one way or another, particularly, in determining how they should feel about Joby. Joby’s just a guy like a lot of guys, who wasn’t ready for fatherhood; he had to make a choice between life on the road as a musician, or living in this stifling small town with his wife and daughter, and when it came down to it he chose to take what he saw as a singular opportunity to pursue the career he wanted.
This sparseness of back story makes Joby more relatable, and at least empathetic, if not entirely sympathetic. He is what he is: not the father Claire would have had him be; not the father Ellen would like him to be. Joby’s the guy who likes to be on the road, who darkens his soul patch with mascara in gas station bathrooms and drinks too much in too many cheap hotel rooms, not the guy who’s going to be there for his daughter’s piano recitals and skinned knees. But he’s also a musician, an artist feeling keenly his inability to break through to find success in the way he wants it, and that’s certainly something that anyone who aspires to take a chance and create rather than just do a mundane job to pay the bills can relate to. Artistic pursuit almost always requires some kind of sacrifice, and Joby’s made life choices that have already defined his path.
The press notes indicate that Kim created this story to explore her feelings about her own absent father, so in that sense perhaps she wanted to keep it a bit more abstract to allow room for individual interpretation, rather that spinning out a more specific story that judges her protagonist one way or another. Joby’s not quite a hero, not quite an antihero. He’s simply a mirror against which our own ideas of parenthood and responsibility refract, which for me, makes For Ellen a million times better than stories of a similar theme that try to tell us precisely what to think.
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Warrior Movie Trailer
Family is worth fighting for.
The youngest son (Hardy) of an alcoholic former boxer (Nolte) returns home, where he’s trained by his father for competition in a mixed martial arts tournament — a path that puts the fighter on a collision corner with his older brother (Edgerton).
The youngest son (Hardy) of an alcoholic former boxer (Nolte) returns home, where he’s trained by his father for competition in a mixed martial arts tournament — a path that puts the fighter on a collision corner with his older brother (Edgerton).
Monday, November 28, 2011
About "Upcoming Movie Trailers and Summaries"
In every body's spare time, almost everyone would love to use it watching movies and enjoy the time with the family and friends.
New movies or any of the Hollywood hits, a lot of us will surely follow its trends and wait for the big change in the entertainment fields.
Knowing how the movie goes, how the actors and actresses successfully get on their roles and most of all, how people reacted on it at the end.
Either a movie is a success or a failure, everyone will be interested on why things goes that way or in the other way. But more importantly,
movie viewers who will enjoy and even disappointed to the movie they had watch will surely give out their comments and reaction after the show,
would be excited for it's latest news regarding what's new and hottest issues. Followers and movie goers sometimes enjoy going to cinemas, even buy new releases of DVDs,
download from the Internet or even surf the web for free streaming sites and enjoy the full movie on their seats.
No matter how you watch it, or wherever you watch or whomever you watch it with,the main point is every body always love watching movies, so in this blog, we'd like to give out trailers,
summaries and even movie feedback from different viewers from different places of different races.
Let's enjoy and let these group grow daily and of everyday.
New movies or any of the Hollywood hits, a lot of us will surely follow its trends and wait for the big change in the entertainment fields.
Knowing how the movie goes, how the actors and actresses successfully get on their roles and most of all, how people reacted on it at the end.
Either a movie is a success or a failure, everyone will be interested on why things goes that way or in the other way. But more importantly,
movie viewers who will enjoy and even disappointed to the movie they had watch will surely give out their comments and reaction after the show,
would be excited for it's latest news regarding what's new and hottest issues. Followers and movie goers sometimes enjoy going to cinemas, even buy new releases of DVDs,
download from the Internet or even surf the web for free streaming sites and enjoy the full movie on their seats.
No matter how you watch it, or wherever you watch or whomever you watch it with,the main point is every body always love watching movies, so in this blog, we'd like to give out trailers,
summaries and even movie feedback from different viewers from different places of different races.
Let's enjoy and let these group grow daily and of everyday.
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