August 2007

Arctic Tale

  • Title: Arctic Tale
  • IMDb: link

Arctic Tale

The documentary, as narrated by Queen Latifah, follows a handful of arctic creatures.  The main focus of the film is the separate stories of two animals: a polar bear named Nanu and a walrus named Seela.  The documentary begins with their births and development and follows each of them through the first eight years of their lives as they grow, mature, and have children of their own.  Somebody cue up “Circle of Life” from The Lion King.

As a documentary for young viewers it does a good job of setting up the life cycles of its main characters and explaining how the changing climate in the arctic is effecting everything.  Though adults won’t really find any new information, the film does work as a good primer for kids.  It is well shot and compiled, including many scenes which you wonder how close the camera men got to their subjects, and for adults wanting something educational to watch and discuss with their youngsters this will suffice.

What doesn’t work?  The documentary is geared to young children and although Latifah never comes off as condescending, at times it does seem to talk down to kids.  It is also filled with some juvenile fart humor that anyone over the age of ten will grow tired of quickly enough.  And finally, the film is filled with musical cues that are a little too cute for me.  An example, when discussing the family of walruses, “We Are Family” begins to play.

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Writers Grossed Out at Fox

Here’s an interesting little tidbit for you aspiring screenwriters.  20th Century Fox has made a deal with a co-oop of writers including Ted Elliot, Terry Rossio, John August, and Stuart Beattie (among others) where the writers will receive $300,00 upfront for a script (minimum) PLUS offering them 2.5% of the gross if the film makes it through production and is released.  That’s right folks, Fox is paying the guys responsible for Charle’s Angels: Full Throttle and PotC: Dead Man’s Chest and At World’s End up the whazoo!  I don’t know about you, but I’m dusting off my old screenplay and faxing it off to Fox as we speak!

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Movie News

As our pals at Scene Stealers noted earlier this week Tim Burton‘s latest enterprise, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, is set to open up this Christmas.  Burton has rounded up his regulars including Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter to bring this dark musical about a barber who kills his customers and whose corpses become the secret ingredient in Ms. Lovett’s “meat pies.”  For more on the film, including a larger version of this still image, cast and crew info, and a clip of Kevin Smith’s take on Sweeney Todd, check out the Full Diagnosis.

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
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Sweeney Todd (Johnny Depp, left) takes Mrs. Lovett (Helena Bonham Carter, right) into his confidence in Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. DreamWorks Pictures and Warner Bros. Pictures Present A Parkes/MacDonald Production and A Zanuck Company Production A Tim Burton Film “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street” starring Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, Alan Rickman, Timothy Spall and Sacha Baron Cohen. The film is directed by Tim Burton from a screenplay by John Logan based on the musical by Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler originally staged by Harold Prince from an adaptation by Christopher Bond. Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim. The producers are Richard D. Zanuck, Walter Parkes, Laurie MacDonald and John Logan. The executive producer is Patrick McCormick. This film is not yet rated.

© 2007 by DreamWorks LLC and Warner Bros. Entertainment. All Rights Reserved.


 

The talent competition from Kevin Smith‘s Jersey Girl featuring Liv Tyler, Ben Affleck and Raquel Castro performing a scene from Sweeney Todd.

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RazorFine Presents – The Scarlet Spider

Welcome to the premiere issue of RazorFine Presents Comic Spotlight as we take a look at comic heroes, villians, and everything in between.  We begin with one of the most controversial characters in Marvel Comics history, The Scarlet Spider.  Sure, we could have started out with Batman, Superman, Captain America, Wonder Woman, the X-Men, or Spidey himself, but we enjoy a little controversy from time to time, and there are few recent comic characters and controversial as this one.  With that, I give you, The Scarlet Spider!

The Scarlet Spider

Name: Ben Reilly/Peter Parker

1st Appearance: Web of Spider-Man #118

Final Appearance: Spider-Man #75 (Death)

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A little more than a decade ago the folks a Marvel Comics decided to reintroduce a character long thought dead.  In the 1970’s Peter Parker was cloned by The Jackal for vengeance at his responsibility in the death of Gwen Stacy.  Spider-Man defeated the clone who he believed had died.  Twenty-years later Marvel would resurrect the character as Ben Reilly and return him to New York as a new kind of web-slinger, The Scarlet Spider.

The Scarlet Spider

After living for years on the road Ben Reilly returned to New York City aware of the May Parker’s stroke and deteriorating health.  Unable to let his powers be wasted he would take up a new persona as The Scarlet Spider.  At first at odds and then with the help of Spider-Man the Scarlet Spider became a hero in his own right including a short stint as a member of the New Warriors.  Then, as comic book publishers do from time to time, Marvel decided to get too cute.  They revealed Peter, not Ben, was the clone and rightly deserving of the mantle of Spider-Man which he took over for a time before sacrificing himself to save Peter Parker’s life in Spider-Man issue #75.  The rapid disintegration of his body after his death proved that Peter was truly the real Spider-Man who returned to his duty once more.

Powers and Abilities – The Scarlet Spider had the same abilities and powers of Spider-Man including the ability to cling and climb walls, enhanced strength, a spider-sense, and increased balance and agility.  Along with his web-shooters, Ben Reilly also added stingers, hardened webbing needles, and impact webbing, pellets of exploding webbing, to The Scarlet Spider’s arsenal.  As a clone Reilly also had Peter’s early knowledge of science, specifically Chemistry and Physics.

Marvel managed to bungle an intriguing Clone Saga and in the end kill off the poor Mr. Reilly.  The Scarlet Spider for however short of a time provided an interesting and different Spidey-like hero.  It’s too bad Marvel couldn’t find a way to keep Reilly around, whether clone or real, as the Marvel Universe should be big enough for both Spidey and The Scarlet Spider.

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