Thursday, May 12, 2005

Star Wars Fan Film A Cut Above the Rest

In anticipation of Episode III, one ambitious fan set out to add his own chapter in the saga. Fan-made Star Wars films are nothing new, but this 40-minute film was a little more ambitious than the rest.

Read about the film and filmaker here and see the trailer (cheesy acting, great special effects) here.

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

New Harry Potter trailer

If we can think past summer movies like Star Wars (only a week away!) and Batman (more than a month!) for a minute, this November, the 4th Harry Potter movie -- Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire -- hits theatres.

See the first trailer here.

My, the kids are growing up.....

DC introduces first new logo in decades

For the first time since 1978, DC Comics will be using a new logo, not just on its comics, but on all material, includng movies, TV shows (live action and animated), DVDs, action figures and more. For the first time ever, DC -- not Warner Bros. -- will be treated as a major brand across all media, similar to what Marvel began doing with its movies a few years ago.

The logo will debut on comics on May 18 with DC Special: The Return of Donna Troy. An animated version of the logo will be included with Batman Begins, opening June 18.

From the press release:
As both a distinguished publisher and a vital creative development source, DC is a unique asset in the media world for both Warner Bros. Entertainment and Time Warner. DC has the ability to create properties that appeal to a wide-ranging audience, from preschoolers (Krypto) to adults (Constantine), and everyone in between. For decades, DC characters have permeated pop culture around the world and cutting edge graphic novels such as Watchmen and Sandman have altered the public's idea of the medium. 2005 marks the beginning of the next stage of the ongoing evolution of one of the media world's gems, DC Comics.

DC talks about the logo and new branding initiative here.

Clone Wars to be Fought on Saturday

This Saturday, the Cartoon Network will show all 25 chapters of the animated Star Wars prequel series, Clone Wars, from 7-10 pm ET. The events in this series take place after Episode II and lead directly into Episode III (which opens next week). Get psyched for the movie and catch a really cool animated series this Saturday night.

Elvis: What Happened?

So, Part 1 of the 4-hour Elvis mini-series aired on Sunday night.

The guy looked pretty good, and the movie is OK. I find the use of the actual recordings to be very distracting. In most of the cases, he’s supposed to be singing live and he obviously isn’t.

For instance, The Dorsey Bros and Milton Berle appearances. You heard piano, but didn’t see it. And I’ve seen and heard the original TV appearances often enough, that it just came across as fake. Inexplicably, they used real footage of the Army draft. If they’re going to mix in footage, the time to do it would have been the TV appearances.

I am unfairly comparing it to the Elvis TV series, which didn’t use the real music, but it was close, and sounded live when it needed to. That show was great, but it got into more day-to-day stuff, and hadn’t even gotten to the point where he made Love Me Tender before it was cancelled. That guy looked so much like Elvis, and the guys playing Scotty and Bill looked like them. If it comes out on DVD, I may get it.

This was much broader. The guys doing Scotty and Bill here, there’s not even an attempt to resemble . In fact, they should have switched actors, it would have been a little closer. I like how the Dad is played, but I think both his mother and Col. Tom are being way overplayed as the ones who ruined Elvis. Granted, they did, but there are no shades of gray here at all. The music was the one area the Col. stayed out of – except for Scotty and Bill, because they had too much influence on Elvis.

I think that in the beginning. Col. Tom was good for Elvis – he got him on TV, got him national attention, got him to RCA., got him the movie contract (a mixed blessing, that)

Actually, the interesting take I got from it was, that Parker never expected Elvis to last more than a few years at best, and was trying to get all the money they could while he could do it. Things like consequences to a long-term career were not a consideration.

In retrospect, he seems like this awful human being (and he probably was), but his decisions were sound, business-wise. However, he didn’t know how to sustain the popularity properly. He never adapted his style, and never evolved beyond a carnival huckster. And he never cared about Elvis as more than a product.

But Elvis should have dumped him when he got out of the army. Almost everything between 1961 and 1968 was awful. His first album after the army was good (with "Such a Night", "Mess o’ Blues", etc), but until the Comeback Special and the album now known as "Suspicious Minds" (originally “From Elvis in Memphis” I think), it was just bad. Viva Las Vegas is campy fun, but not really good – in 1964, the same year the Beatles hit America!. Elvis was SO irrelevant.

Part 1 skipped over Jailhouse Rock and King Creole, movies where Elvis showed potential as an actor. The next movies they’ll probably show is GI Blues and Blue Hawaii (skipping over Flaming Star and Follow That Dream, where he tired to stretch a little ). Then they’ll probably do a bad movie montage until they get to Viva Las Vegas, so they can do stuff with Rose McGowan as Ann Margaret. I wonder if they’’ show the Sinatra special, or that first post-army album

I think Part 2 will be more interesting, though all the reviews said Part 1 is better. The clips they showed of the Comeback Special looked pretty cool actually. Col. Tom is going to come off even worse here – the bad movies, the lack of touring, the ignoring of the drug problem.

I give it a C+.