Archive for the ‘Movie Projects’ Category

The Hollywood Reporter “The Double” Review
Posted by Eric • Leave a Comment / No Comments »
Categories: News, The Double

Warning: This article contains spoilers! If you wish to remain spoiler free, refrain from reading the article!

Richard Gere is on icy-cool autopilot in The Double, a barely warm dish of Cold War leftovers that shows its hand too early, then works itself into an increasingly implausible tangle of knotty plot developments without ever mustering much intensity.

The pedestrian espionage thriller marks a physically capable but uninspired directing debut for screenwriter Michael Brandt, who penned the script with regular writing partner Derek Haas. That team’s previous collaborations have included the muscular Western remake 3:10 to Yuma and visceral high-octane action fare 2 Fast 2 Furious and Wanted, both of which benefited from a sly sense of humor beneath all the revved-up, outlandish hyper-violence.

It’s disappointing then that Brandt would choose to step behind the camera with material that might have been fished from a bottom drawer, its tortuous plotting simultaneously half-baked and overcooked. A tired tale of covert elements within the CIA and FBI, the movie attempts to slap a gritty edge and a modern veneer of national-security paranoia onto a storyline with echoes of vintage Frederick Forsyth or John le Carre.

Gere plays Paul Shepherdson, a veteran CIA operative summoned back from retirement by his supervisor (Martin Sheen) when the murder of a U.S. Senator with business ties to Russia points to the return of a long-inactive Soviet assassin, codenamed Cassius. Shepherdson spent 20 years tracking Cassius, eliminating the killer’s vicious hit squad but never locating the man himself, who is believed to be dead.

Action-hungry young FBI rookie Ben Geary (Topher Grace) doesn’t buy that theory. He wrote his Harvard Master’s thesis on the hunt for Cassius and gets paired with the reluctant Shepherdson on the rebooted investigation.

Given that the identity of Cassius is revealed in the trailer for The Double, it should come as no surprise that the movie also spills that secret just a half-hour in. That leaves little to occupy the audience as Geary pores over old case files, while Shepherdson circles the ambitious upstart and his family with ominous warnings that no good can come of getting close to a ruthless killer.

More convoluted than psychologically complex, the film keeps a second big reveal up its sleeve for the final reel. But by that point there’s been such a pileup of movie-ish plot contrivances that it’s likely to provoke more eye-rolls than gasps.

Gere puts the effort into the role that it merits, which is to say very little. He has played variations on this steely-smooth vessel of immorality and deception countless times before, with far superior results. Mike Figgis’ supremely sleazy (not to mention subversively misogynistic, homophobic and all-round misanthropic) 1990 thriller, Internal Affairs, is a notable example. This time, he mostly looks bored, which doesn’t help the absence of chemistry between the male leads.

Grace lacks the gravitas to assume chief-sleuth duties or to persuasively ground the shock twist of the final act. And his happy-family home life with adoring wife (Odette Yustman) and cute kids is too perfunctorily sketched to make us care about their endangerment.

There’s some momentary pleasure in watching Stephen Moyer glower and snarl with relish as a reptilian Russian thug who makes the actor’s vampire king Bill Compton on True Blood seem like a puppy. But almost everything else about this routine thriller, from its slick visuals to its churning techno score, is unremarkable.

Opens Oct. 28 (Image Entertainment)
Production: Hyde Park Entertainment, in association with Imagenation Abu Dhabi
Producers: Ashok Amritraj, Patrick Aiello, Derek Haas, Andrew Deane
Director: Michael Brandt
Screenwriters: Michael Brandt, Derek Haas
Cast: Richard Gere, Topher Grace, Stana Katic, Stephen Moyer, Martin Sheen, Odette Yustman
Director of photography: Jeffrey Kimball
Production designer: Giles Masters
Costume designer: Aggie Guerard Rodgers
Music: John Debney
Editor: Steve Mirkovich
PG13 rating; 98 minutes

Source



“The Double” Trailer & Captures
Posted by Eric • Leave a Comment / No Comments »
Categories: Gallery, The Double, Videos

The official trailer for Stana’s movie The Double was released the other day! You can check it out below, as well as captures of Stana from the trailer in the gallery. Stana is barely in the trailer, though. She is only in it for a few seconds, starting at 1:53. It looks like a really good movie, though! I’m really excited for it! Enjoy! :)

Gallery Link
Movie Productions > The Double > Trailer Screen Captures



Bloomberg “For Lovers Only” Interview
Posted by Eric • Leave a Comment / No Comments »
Categories: For Lovers Only, Videos



“The Double” Set for 9/23 Release
Posted by Eric • Leave a Comment / No Comments »
Categories: News, The Double

In THE DOUBLE, the mysterious murder of a US senator bearing the distinctive trademark of the legendary Soviet assassin “Cassius,” forces Paul Shepherdson (Richard Gere), a retired CIA operative, to team with rookie FBI agent, Ben Geary (Topher Grace), to solve the crime.

Having spent his career chasing Cassius, Shepherdson is convinced his nemesis is long dead, but is pushed to take on the case by his former supervisor, Tom Highland (Martin Sheen). Meanwhile, Agent Geary, who wrote his Master’s thesis on Shepherdson’s pursuit of the Soviet killer, is certain that Cassius has resurfaced. As Shepherdson and Geary work their way through crimes both past and present, they discover that Cassius may not be the person they always thought him to be, forcing both to re-examine everything and everyone around them.

A taut espionage thriller, THE DOUBLE stars Richard Gere, Topher Grace, Martin Sheen, Stephen Moyer, Odette Yustman, and Stana Katic. Written by Michael Brandt and Derek Haas, the team behind “Wanted” and “3:10 To Yuma,” the film also represents Brandt’s directorial debut.

The film is set for a September 23 release.

Source



Comic Con Interviews
Posted by Eric • Leave a Comment / No Comments »
Categories: Batman: Arkham City, Videos

Check out these 3 videos of Stana being interviewed at Comic Con! Enjoy! :)



Comic Com 2011 Video Footage
Posted by Eric • Leave a Comment / No Comments »
Categories: Batman: Arkham City, Videos

Check out this short video of Stana talking about the character she will be doing the voice of at the Batman: Arkham City Panel at Comic Con! Enjoy! :)



Movies & TV Shows Update
Posted by Eric • Leave a Comment / No Comments »
Categories: Big Sur, Castle, For Lovers Only, Gallery

I’m going through the gallery section by section to see what the gallery is missing. I did the events earlier and I just the movies & TV shows section. I added some posters and stills for Stana’s movies and the rest of the Castle episode stills we were missing from Season 3. Photoshoots and magazine scans will be added soon. Enjoy! :)

Gallery Links
Movie Productions > Truth About Kerry > Posters
Movie Productions > For Lovers Only > Posters
Movie Productions > Big Sur > Stills
Castle > Season 3 > Episode Stills > 3×22 – To Love And Die In L.A.
Castle > Season 3 > Episode Stills > 3×23 – Pretty Dead
Castle > Season 3 > Episode Stills > 3×24 – Knockout



Batman Arkham City Villains comfirmed
Posted by Eric • Leave a Comment / No Comments »
Categories: Batman: Arkham City, News

Talia Al Ghul

Actor Stana Katic, confirmed via her Twitter account she’ll be voicing Talia al Ghul, daughter of Ra’s al Ghul. “Just recorded a character voice on the next Batman videogame. Never did that before.”

In her youth, Talia travels the world with her father learning and adapting his intellect and skills which she proves to be more competent than any of Ghul’s other children. She excels to the point in managing his criminal and legitimate operations, that she is eventually appointed as Ghul’s primary secondary despite the fact that Ghul considers women to be inheritantly inferior to men. Ghul is supportive of his daughter though has commented that if possible, he would correct “that sole failing” in his child suggesting that he fears any possible distortion of her through chemical or biological modifications despite his aversion to her as a woman.

Source