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Interstellar review

Director: Christopher Nolan

Starring: Matthew MacConaghey, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain, David Gyasi, Michael Caine, Bill Irwin, Casey Affleck, Mackenzie Foy, Timothee Chalamet, Wes Bentley, John Lithgow, Topher Grace, David Oyelowo, Ellen Burstyn

These days a blockbuster could take years to come into existence, setbacks including casting difficulty and constant rewrites of the script. Christopher Nolan is one of those few directors who no one can say no to when offered a gig. His new passion project, Interstellar, was announced just early last year and instantly went to shooting but a mix bag of critical responses question if the Brit has pulled it off again.

In a near future where blight ravages the world, former engineer and single father Cooper (MacConaughey) investigates a gravitational anomaly is the bedroom of his young daughter, Murphy (Foy). This leads him to a secretly ongoing branch of NASA, led by Brand (Caine), who recruit him as part of a four man crew to enter a newly emerged wormhole in hopes of finding a sustainable replacement to Earth.

Pushing a risky 170 minute runtime, this has to be one of the most ambitious efforts ever committed to film, and in this case it actually was. Scrapping digital reinforces the theme of a second hand, dirtied world. This is a production completely unchained and unlimited in scope; not a shot is out of line from the near-barren plains of the mid-west to the genuinely stunning landscapes of distant planets.

Sound, design and cinematography (a first collaboration with Hoyte van Hoytema) are all note perfect but the driving force is Chris Nolan. It’s his unrivalled amounts of innovation that sets Interstellar apart. Scene after scene showcases a rare cinematic magic: a tear filled MacConaughey leaving through the fields as the countdown begins; the journey through the wormhole; the colossal threats of Miller’s planet. These stark images are craftsmanship of the highest standard from a remarkable mind.

The other major technical contributor is composer Hans Zimmer who shines with a compelling and numbing organ-based soundtrack. This is far from his best work though, greatly deprived of his iconic use of percussion. Its main purpose is as an audio aid to the blistering visuals.

The narrative, initially instigated by physicist supervisor Kip Thorne but helmed by Chris and Jonathan Nolan, isn’t to the same vein of the unravelable puzzles of Memento and Inception but it still requires the same ongoing dissection. Unlike the two aforementioned works, this doesn’t build upon its own established but a mixture of scientific fact and theory. The phrase mind-boggling falls short of describing Thorne’s concepts, in particular the different passing of time. There’s now doubt that the science works out but this culminates in a more fantastical ending that may not stand up to more rigorous scrutiny.

The plot itself follows Cooper, a weary Mid-West single father and former engineer. He raises the educationally fledging Tom, an fiercely underdeveloped character, and the prodigious Murphy with their grandfather Donald (John Lithgow). Cooper may well be the nondescript American hero (with a perhaps indecipherable accent to suit) but the scene in which he numbly watches twenty years of family history within minutes before breaking down both redeems MacConaughey and proves him as the capable leading man he is.

Although he is the leading man, the plot obviously hinges on his daughter Murphy, a budding scientist taken under the wing of Michael Caine’s ageing Professor Brand. The young Mackenzie Foy in superb as an abandoned girl naively believing that her father will return. She morphs into Jessica Chastain, a cynic who comes the the realization that Cooper is lost and that humanity’s survival lies with her. With cunning, smarts and deep rooted inner complications, Murphy has to be the heroine of the year so far.

The film’s other key relationship is between Brand and his daughter Amelia, excellently played by Anne Hathaway, but this doesn’t quite pack the same emotional impact as the other – the two share very little screentime. The two perform greatly as individuals though: Caine plays a fabled Moses type character weighed down by his responsibilities and compromised by his cold approach to humanity’s future but alternatively Amelia is thrown by her own emotional attachments. It’s a grave comparison from the Coopers’ bond to this paternal fragility and it’s great to see scientists portrayed not as eccentrics but characters with very human contradictions and faults.

Beyond these central roles and fairly nondescript popups from Murph’s husband Topher Grace and dull astronaut Wes Bentley, there are the odd stand out roles. Relative newcomer David Gyasi is superb as Romilly, the crew member left behind on the Endurance while the others embark to the first planet for however many years it takes. His traditional performance isn’t a scratch however on Bill Irwin’s wry portrayal of TARS, a helper robot who adds a rare bit of warmth and humour (the new Eames?) that Nolan perhaps needs. The design itself is more practical than iconic but it still becomes a root-worthy supporting player.

One star sourly undernourished on screen is Casey Affleck as Tom, the near-forgotten son of Cooper. Starting off as a well mannered teen destined for a fortune lesser than his sister’s and suddenly becoming a domestic monster imprisoning his endangered family, He has one of the film’s most starling transformations but skips the transition period: there’s beginning, cause and aftermath but no gradual development. The Assassination of Jesse James’ brilliant Oscar nominated star could have made something special out of the role but it sinks into a standard backing appearance.

Despite this none of the performances actually let down in quality, just quantity. Its quantity in visual scope, emotional depth and mass of content however won’t bore but permits a chance to revel for even longer in sheer brilliance. While the scientific dialect will baffle some, the dialogue itself isn’t quite the complex maze of Memento, as slick as Inception or as iconic as The Dark Knight trilogy and there are the odd dud lines (Hathaway’s “love transcends the universe” speech falls short). The opening scenes are packed with poor exposition, especially a meeting between Cooper and school principal David Oyelowo in which they awkwardly cover history leading to these events.

There was a fair amount of criticism of the supposed anti-agrarian message mixed with elitist ideals of otherworldly ambition but what Interstellar superbly evokes is the most raw of emotions: selfishness, selflessness, survival and sentimentality. In the far reaches of space Nolan masterfully crafts his most human picture yet. Perhaps inferior to Inception, this is one awe inspiring and phenomenally acted ode to life, the universe and everything.

10/10

“We must reach far beyond our own lifespans. We must think not as individuals but as a species. We must confront the reality of interstellar travel.”

Paul Walker in new Fast 7 picture and MacConaughey and Hathaway in new Intestellar stills

The world of film suffered a great loss late last year after the tragic death of Fast and Furious’ Paul Walker. The production of Fast 7 is attempting as best they can to do justice to his final role. Co-star Vin Diesel has now tweeted a picture of the of the few scenes that Walker did film, offering the full insight at the film. James Wan (Saw, The Conjuring) directs series regulars Paul Walker (Flags of Our Fathers), Vin Diesel (Riddick, Guardians of the Galaxy), Dwayne Johnson (The Scorpion King), Michelle Rogriguez (Avatar), Tyrese Gibson (Transformers) and Jordana Brewster (Dallas) and newcomers Jason Statham (The Transporter), Djimon Hounsou (Gladiator) and Kurt Russell (The Thing, Big Trouble in Little China).

The week-long promotion of epic sci-fi mystery Interstellar has come to an end but this month the film is the subject of this month’s issue of Empire who’ve debuted a set of new stills from the film. Christopher Nolan (The Dark Knight, Inception, Memento, The Prestige) directs the cast of Matthew MacConaughey (True Detective), Jessica Chastain (Tree of Life), Casey Affleck (Gone Baby Gone), Anne Hathaway (Les Miserables), Matt Damon (Saving Private Ryan), Michael Caine (Zulu), David Oyelowo (Jack Reacher), John Lithgow (Terms of Endearment), Wes Bentley (The Hunger Games), Ellen Bursytn (The Exorcist) and Bill Irwin as TARS.

Interstellar – November 7th

Fast and Furious 7 – April 3rd 2015

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Ryan Reynold’s Deadpool reportedly greenlit, Toby Kebbell joins Ben-Hur, new Agents of SHIELD teaser and (another) Interstellar poster

The marketing team for Christopher Nolan’s secrecy soaked sci-fi Interstellar will be having the time of their lives: across this week, a whole series of posters for the film have been revealed one by one. Today is no exception. This one sheet sees a spacecraft downed in either domestic or alien waters. Nolan, British writer/director behind The Dark Knight trilogy, Memento, The Prestige and Inception, directs the cast of Matthew MacConaughey, Jessica Chastain, Michael Caine, Casey Affleck, Anne Hathaway, David Oyelowo, Matt Damon, Ellen Burstyn and John Lithgow.

A planned spin off for Ryan Reynolds’ (Safe House, Buried) crazed superhero Deadpool, who made his only, mediocre appearance in the vastly disappointing X-Men Origins: Wolverine, has been in development hell for the past six years. Most of that time the project has only been kept alive by the comic book character’s ongoing popularity. It has now been reported that Fox have greenlit the film for an early 2016 release. Tim Miller, who for an excruciatingly long time has been attached to the film, is now confirmed as director. My key hope for the film is that it can settle for a 15 rating: any lower and it wouldn’t have the same tone as the often adult comics but higher and the gore would unfairly become the focus.

I was one of many distraught by Toby Kebbell’s casting in the prestigious role of Doctor Doom in next year’s Fantastic Four but the star proved himself greatly going up against Andy Serkis’ Ceasar in Dawn of the Planet of the Apes. He’s now setting himself up for another villainous role as Messala in the new remake of Ben-Hur. The historical epic already has Morgan Freeman (Batman Begins, The Shawkshank Redemption, Seven) signed on to play mentor Ildarin while Jack Huston (American Hustle, Broadwalk Empire) is negotiating to play the titular hero. 12 Years a Slave’s John Ridley writes while Wanted’s Timur Bekmambetov directs.

Finally today we’ve got an awesome new poster for season 2 of Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD. The expansion of the multi billion superhero universe got off to a fairly rough start but pulled itself together with an excellent second half to the series. Deduce what you like from the teaser. Clark Gregg, Ming-Na Wen, Chloe Bennett, Brett Dalton, Elizabeth Henstridge, Iain De Caestecker, BJ Britt, Adrianne Palicki, Patton Oswalt, Nick Blood, Reed Diamond, Adrian Pasdar, Kyle MacLachlan and Lucy Lawless will all feature in some way in the new season.

Agents of SHIELD season 2 – this autumn on ABC and Channel 4

Deadpool – February 12th 2016

Interstellar – November 7th

Ben-Hur – February 19th 2016

Kate Mara in Ridley Scott’s The Martian, another Interstellar poster and Benedict Cumberbatch in new Imitation Game teaser

I was one of many who were perplexed when Kate Mara, seen before in mediocre supporting roles in Shooter and Transcendence, was cast as the superhero lead Invisible Woman in Fantastic Four. She’s since proved herself with a recurring role on House of Cards. It’s now rumoured that she’s set for a role in sci-fi thriller The Martian. Ridley Scott (Gladiator, Alien, American Gangster, Prometheus, Black Hawk Down, Blade Runner) directs and has assembled the cast of Matt Damon (Saving Private Ryan, The Bourne Identity), Kristen Wiig (Bridesmaids, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty) and Jessica Chastain (The Help, Zero Dark Thirty).

Many of next year’s Oscar frontrunners are now just beginning to hit screens at festival’s around the world, months before their general release. Gone Girl, Interstellar, Fury, Inherent Vice, Big Eyes and Exodus: Gods and Kings seem to be keeping their cards close to their chests while Boyhood, Birdman, The Judge and Foxcatcher have gained acclaim from their limited audiences. A dark horse in the awards race is wartime drama The Imitation Game, a character piece centred on tortured codebreaker Alan Turing. A brand new poster has been released online. Benedict Cumberbatch (Sherlock, Star Trek Into Darkness), Keira Knightley (Anna Karenina, Pirates of the Caribbean), Charles Dance (Game of Thrones), Matthew Goode (Stoker) and Mark Strong (Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy).

You may have noticed our focus on Christopher Nolan’s (Inception, Memento, The Prestige, Insomnia, The Dark Knight trilogy) epic sci-fi mystery Interstellar this week. One by one, awesome new posters have been revealed and today’s is now exception. Nolan’s secrecy shrouded ninth film, set around a century into our future as the Earth begins the deteriorate, sees lowly engineer Cooper (Matthew MacConaughey) recruited by a government figure (Michael Caine) to join a group of explorers (Anne Hathaway, David Oyelowo, Wes Bentley) in entering a recently discovered wormhole. Meanwhile, Cooper’s children (Casey Affleck, Jessica Chastain) grow up alone on Earth. The film also stars John Lithgow, Ellen Burstyn and Matt Damon.

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Interstellar – November 7th

The Imitation Game – November 14th

The Martian – November 27th 2015

Jack Huston confirmed for Ben-Hur, James D’Arcy joins Agent Carter as the new Jarvis and new Interstellar poster

Brit Jack Huston is shaping up to be a potentially great rising star following his recurring gig on Broadwalk Empire and supporting role in as a mobster in American Hustle. He’s now set to be making one great step into stardom with the lead in Ben-Hur. The iconic role, once played by Charlton Heston, will be seen once more in a new remake, courtesy of Wanted director Timur Bekmambetov. Morgan Freeman (The Dark Knight, Seven, Million Dollar Baby, The Shawshank Redemption) is already signed on to play chariot racing mentor Ildarin while you may remember that Tom Hiddleston (War Horse, Only Lovers Left Alive, The Avengers) was previously rumoured to have been attached to the role although it appears as if he’s opted out in favour of Skull Island.

The role of Jarvis in Marvel comics greatly differs to the portrayal seen across numerous film adaptations. Originally, Edwin Jarvis is butler to both Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr) and, later, The Avengers but on film, where he has been portrayed by Paul Bettany on four occasions, is an AI assistant to Stark’s technological enterprises, named JARVIS, who we only here the voice of. In next year’s Age of Ultron, JARVIS will be animated in the form of the robotic Vision. We thought that’d be all from the non-superpowered character but his original version is working his way onto our screen.

He’ll in fact be portrayed on the small screen by Cloud Atlas’ James D’Arcy in the upcoming Agent Carter, a spin off of the MCU set in SHIELD’s early days after WW2 starring Hayley Atwell. An eight-part first season to the show arrives this winter. Confused? We were too. We’ve now assumed that D’Arcy’s Jarvis will in fact be butler to Howard Stark (Dominic Cooper), father of Tony, and will then provide inspiration for Tony’s automated companion later on. Given the significance of this role, we’d expect Cooper to either be a regular on the show or at least looming presence of SHIELD’s activities. It’s possible that younger versions of future SHIELD veterans such as Nick Fury, Alexander Pierce or Hank Pym (played by Samuel L Jackson, Robert Redford and Michael Douglas, respectively, on film) will be seen while, seeing as D’Arcy convinced in the elderly make up in Cloud Atlas, I hope that an older version of this Jarvis may crop up in the films.

Christopher Nolan (The Dark Knight, Memento, The Prestige, Inception) writes and directs Interstellar, which may be the defining sci-fi of out generation – not to overhype. After yesterday’s unveiling, another poster has been revealed and it showcases our hero Cooper gazing at the stars, as oppose to traversing them. Matthew MacConaughey (Dallas Buyers Club), Michael Caine (Alfie), Anne Hathaway (Les Miserables), Jessica Chastain (Zero Dark Thirty), Casey Affleck (The Assassination of Jesse James), David Oyelowo (Rise of the Planet of the Apes), John Lithgow (Terms of Endearment), Ellen Burstyn (The Excorcist) and Matt Damon (The Bourne Identity) all star in a cast of five Oscar wins and an additional fifteen nominations. I leave you both of the posters (note: they are almost identical in layout except for the tagline).

Interstellar – November 7th

Ben-Hur – February 19th 2016

Agent Carter – ABC and Channel 4 this winter

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Christopher Nolan hints for Interstellar and new pics from Dawn of the Planet of the Apes and first TMNT trailer

We start with an apology for yesterday’s absence. We’d scheduled it to be the day of my review of Marvel’s thriller Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Our review will arrive on Sunday but today we’re making up for that with some incredibly exciting film news for three of this year’s biggest movies.

In my mind, Christopher Nolan is the single greatest British writer/director of this century. He began his career with the first class thrillers Insomnia and The Following but found his big break with the psychological mystery Memento. That soon lead to him landing the director’s chair on Batman Begins. From there, he confirmed legendary status with The Dark Knight, The Prestige, The Dark Knight Rises and Inception and his technologically stunning and brilliantly written film’s has received a total of 21 Oscar nominations.

So, you won’t be surprised to hear that it is with great excitement and trepidation that we report anything to do with his new film. Still, the ever secretive Nolan has told us very little about it: it’s titled Interstellar, has a greatly impressive cast list and must have something to do with space. He’s finally given a hint at what it’s like to be working with the man who’s currently the biggest actor on the planet: the Oscar winning Matthew MacConaughey. “I needed someone who is very much an everyman, someone the audience could experience the story with,” he says of the Wolf of Wall Street, True Detective and Dallas Buyers Club star. “He’s just a phenomenal, charismatic presence in the movie. His performance is shaping up to be extraordinary.”

Nolan also added a little to do with the styling of the film. “We have spatial interiors. We built closed sets and shot it like a documentary, like they were really there.” Interstellar also stars Anne Hathaway, Casey Affleck, Jessica Chastain, Michael Caine, Topher Grace, Wes Bentley, Mackenzie Foy, David Oyelowo, John Lithgow, Ellen Burstyn, David Gyasi and Matt Damon.

Today’s next snippet comes from Empire’s set-pics from the simian sequel Dawn of the Planet of the Apes. Cloverfield’s Matt Reeves directs the film which has released some awesome shots of the terrifying apes before their post-production motion capture transformation. The film stars Gary Oldman, Judy Greer, Jason Clarke, Keri Russell, Toby Kebbell, Kodi Smit McPhee and Andy Serkis.

Today’s final report concerns the release of the very first trailer for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Michael Bay (director of Transformers) produces this reboot of the cult animation while Jonathan Liebesman (Wrath of the Titans, Battle Los Angeles) directs. The cast list includes of the action adventure includes Alan Ritchson, Noel Fisher, Jeremy Howard, Pete Ploszek, Megan Fox, William Fichtner, Will Arnett, Danny Woodburn and Whoopi Goldberg.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles – October 17th

Dawn of the Planet of the Apes – July 17th

Interstellar – November 7th

The Super-Bowl 2014 Trailers special: Transformers 4, Noah and more!

We’re not venturing into sports just yet but the American Football extravaganza known as Superbowl is a huge event for advertising. With well over 100 million Americans watching, companies have to pay the whopping sum of $8 million dollars just for a one minute advertising slot. Only the biggest of big budget, big star blockbusters can afford to make the cut so you may be quite surprised when I tell you that among the nine titanic efforts trailered last night is the new project from Darren Aronofsky!

But before we get to that, we have the matter of a movie I recently predicted to make over a billion dollars. I speak of the fourquel of a monster series – Transformers: Age of Extinction.

Director Michael Bay (Armaggedon, Pearl Harbour, Bad Boys) returns to the series after a quick, and unsuccessful, break to make Pain and Gain. The franchise hopes to continue it success with an new human cast with Mark Wahlberg, Nicola Peltz and Jack Reynor, replacing the old guard of Shia LaBeaouf, Rosie Huntington-Whitley and Megan Fox. This time, the Autobots are at battle with the villainous Dinobots and the technology tycoon Harold Attinger (Kelsey Grammer), the former is revealed in the very first trailer. The film also stars Stanley Tucci and Peter Cullen. July 10th.

The second instalment in this nine-part epic is Marvel’s very own Captain America: The Winter Soldier. We’ve seen footage from this before but Superbowl unveiled the second trailer, which offers more in depth look at new antagonist The Winter Soldier (Sebastian Stan). The plot pitches Captain America (Chris Evans) still adjusting to life in the 21st Century as well as working with SHIELD Agents such as Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), Crossbones (Frank Grillo) and Falcon (Anthony Mackie) to bring down a new menace who’s terrorising Washington. Cap 2 also stars Emily VanCamp, Samuel L Jackson, Robert Redford, Cobie Smulders, Dominic Cooper, Hayley Attwell and Toby Jones and is directed by Anthony and Joe Russo. March 28th.

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is next. Marc Webb returns to direct the sequel which increases the stakes for Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield) who has to balance life between his superhero alter ego Spider-Man, who’s battling Electro (Jamie Foxx), Rhino (Paul Giamatti) and the sinister father/son double act of Oscorp (Dane DeHaan as Harry and Chris Cooper as Norman), and normal life with the grieving Gwen (Emma Stone) and lonely Aunt May (Sally Field). The new trailer can be found here. To be honest, I’m not that impressed. April 18th.

Following on from their “Across the Internet” campaign, Muppets Most Wanted has launched a new ad in which the new doppelganging villain Clementine literally reaches out to us Across the Internet. Tina Fey, Ty Burrell, Stanley Tucci, Ricky Gervais, Lady Gaga, Tom Hiddleston, Salma Hayek, Christoph Waltz and Danny Trejo make up the human cast alongside the classic Muppets such as Kermit, Miss Piggy, Fozzie, Gonzo, Sam the Eagle, Beaker, Dr Honeydrew, Walter and Animal. Flight of the Conchords/The Muppets’ James Bobin directs. March 28th.

With a premise of no CG, just expensive cars going ridiculously fast, video game adaptation Need for Speed is actually in good shape. It sees newly released ex-con Tobey Marshall (Aaron Paul – Breaking Bad’s Jesse Pinkman) getting back into the dragraces that got him locked up for a year. Upon hearing the news, Marshall’s ex racing partner Dino (Dominic Cooper – Marvel’s Howard Stark) puts a bounty on his head. Scott Waugh (Act of Valour) directs a huge cast including Michael Keeton, Dakota Johnson, Scott Mescudi and Imogen Poots. The superbowl spot can be found hereMarch 12th.

We return to the aforementioned Darren Aronofsky who, after impressing with the likes of Black Swan, The Wrestler, Pi, Requiem for a Dream, The Fountain, makes his comeback with a huge budget and cast list for his new epic picture Noah. The new trailer is available but I’m shocked that a director as prestigious as Aronofsky would fall to the depths of a Twitter hashtag; this time it’s “#TheFloodIsComing”!. The film stars Russell Crowe, Anthony Hopkins, Jennifer Connelly, Emma Watson, Logan Lerman, Ray Winstone, Kevin Durand, Douglas Booth, Nick Nolte and Frank Langella. April 4th.

Pompeii seems to me like one of the potential box office clunkers of the year with a decent cast list which doesn’t match its huge budget but director Paul WS Anderson (Event Horizon, Resident Evil) may prove me wrong. The new trailer unveils a fair bit of spectacle so the film won’t rely on the cast of Kit Harrington, Carrie Anne Moss, Emily Browning, Jessica Lucas, Kiefer Sutherland, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Jared Harris and Jessica Lucas alone. May 2nd.

3 Days to Kill launched a new trailer too. McG (This Means War, Terminator: Salvation, We Are Marshall, Charlie’s Angles) directs this new action thriller starring Kevin Costner as an dying agent who teams up with his daughter for one last assignment which get him the life saving drug he needs. Also starring Amber Heard, Connie Nielson and Hailee Steinfeld. February 21st.

Lastly, we have another Kevin Costner project. Draft Day sees the manger of American Football’s Cleveland Browns who’s struggling to find the number one draft pick for his team. Costner will star alongside Terry Crews, Jennifer Garner and Ellen Burstyn while director Ivan Reitman (Ghost Busters, No Strings Attached). April 11th