Movies


I’ve not read the book, but it has a spectacularly large fan base, so…

Neil Blomkamp’s back…and I’m in!

Here’s ashort based on Tim Maughan’s Paintwork — a book I’ve had queued in my reader for a while and haven’t gotten to:

Ellipse is an attempt to make a grand sci-fi epic that uses real science and astrophysics. You can donate here.

Here’s a trailer for a science fiction fake documentary about a NASA attempt at interstellar travel by Hasraf “HaZ” Dulull

A wee break from the gaming motif:

This project had floated through development hell for at least a decade before they finally got it to the screen. It promptly died a quick death, mostly due to having almost no advertisement or marketing connected to it, at all. So was it so terrible that it should have been left in a vault?

No. it gets off to a slow start, and that is the main issue with the movie that I saw. The acting is adequate, but not awful, considering the material it was based on. The special effects are good. The story adapts the events of A Princess of Mars, (and I suspect bits from other books, but I haven’t read them in a while), but they were smart to not stick too tightly to the book. I don’t think it would have held up well, had think.

The basic story: a group of super creatures/gods/whatever have chosen a vicious warlord to rule Mars (or Barsoom, to the natives) and they want to fashion a marriage with Dejah Thoris, the princess of Helium. through their technology, John Carter — a Virginia cavalryman who lost his family in the Civil War — is transported to the Red Planet, and through a series of mishaps involving his enhanced strength due to the low gravity of Barsoom, impresses the various races of the world and comes to be a champion for Helium. Of course, he gets the girl…sort of.

If you get past the first 30 minutes, you’ll have a good time. It’s definitely a rental, could be a DVD buy if you enjoy it. Style: 5 out of 5 — it looks good, but it’s a PG version, so don’t get your hopes of for Frazzetta-style boobage. Substance 3 out of 5: the books were enjoyable fluff, and the movie doesn’t try to stray too far from the original material.

Now for the non-movie stuff: Disney apparently did their best to torpedo a movie that cost them $220 million or so…why? It’s no worse than any other big-spectacle sci-fi blockbuster, and is a damned sight better than the execrable The Phantom Menace or the overblown, simplistic, and frankly awful Avatar (I don’t give a crap how pretty it was.) My guess is that once the total for the project hit a certain point, in the weak economic condition, Disney chose to insure themselves against a bad showing, and between that and using the movie as a tax writeoff, made more money than if the film had been a success.

 

Lovely…

Another project looking for cash, here’s Kasra Farahani’s Noon. Farahani is known for concept art for Halo 4: Forward unto Dawn and big budget films Thor, Men in Black 3, and Star Trek into Darkness. The screenplay is complete and is set “200 years in the future where an eruption at the Earth’s core causes a shift in the planet’s axis which stops the cycle of night and day. The South Pole became a place of unending night while North experiences continual light. The short focuses on Gray, a man who ‘struggles to salvage what humanity still exists within him’ when he is hired to transfer illegal immigrants to Noon.”

Here’s a trailer for a Danish sci-fi film Exodus. Right now it’s a small multimedia project, but Tommy Ipsen’s looking for funding for it.

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