Posts with tag Brian Cox
Posted Jun 8th 2009 2:45PM by William Goss
Filed under: Horror, Warner Brothers, RumorMonger, Distribution, Fantastic Fest

Mike Dougherty's horror anthology film
Trick 'r Treat has been bumped back by Warner Bros. for going on two years now, since its premiere at Austin's Butt-Numb-a-Thon back in December of 2007. We wrote up a piece
last December wondering where it was, and we shant need to write one up this December, because not only is
TrT scheduled for a home video release in October, but it's working up to a roadshow run starting in July.
According to
Bloody Disgusting, the film will hit several genre festivals -- from FanTasia to Fantastic Fest (squee!) -- and hopes to be booked in other theaters along the way. Those who know of any ideal venues to show the film have been encouraged to contact Dougherty himself through either his
Twitter account or his
MySpace page.
Now, I know several colleagues who loved or at least liked it, though one cautions not to get our hopes up too high. I'm all for keeping expectations in check, but if anything, I'm slightly more for supporting apparently good and genuinely original horror offerings. It's like my equivalent of asking you to prevent forest fires, only instead of forest fires, we're talking
Prom Night sequels. Ya dig?
(Trailer's after the jump...)
Continue reading 'Trick 'r Treat' Won't Wait 'Til Halloween
Posted Jul 9th 2008 5:35PM by Peter Martin
Filed under: Thrillers, Sundance, Magnolia, Distribution, Cinematical Indie
Don't mess with a man's best friend! I'm borrowing that phrase from our own Eric D. Snider, who used it to describe the plot of Red, a thriller starring the great Brian Cox as a man on a mission to avenge the death of his beloved dog at the hands of a bunch of teenage punks.
As Eric noted, Magnolia Pictures picked up distribution rights for the movie and planned a late summer release. Well, it must be later than we thought, because Dread Central now tells us that Red will be unleashed to theaters in New York and Los Angeles on Friday, August 8, followed by a "slow rollout" to more theaters nationwide.
"An emotionally gripping if slightly overwrought drama," is how Eric described Red in his review from Sundance, where the film premiered. Later he called it "a solid B-minus effort, and Cox's performance makes it eminently watchable." In addition to Cox, the cast includes Tom Sizemore as a bad father, Kim Dickens as a TV reporter, and Robert Englund and Amanda Plummer as white trash parents of one of the juvenile delinquent kids responsible for the death of the titular dog.
I've loved Brian Cox in many roles (Braveheart to Manhunter to 25th Hour to X2: X-Men United to Zodiac), so I have to believe he's a major plus for audiences looking for something a little different in August. How about you? Do you have any interest in seeing the Cox-avenging Red?
Posted Jun 20th 2008 7:32PM by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Drama, Images

Back in
January,
Paul Dano signed on to play a crazy healer who gets taken under the wing of
Brian Cox in
The Good Heart. Now
Just Jared has got some shots from Dagur Kari's production, as it gears up in New York. To the right, you can see Dano in hospital whites, playing frisbee. I guess Cox isn't the only one in the film who hangs in the hospital. (There's another picture over at Just Jared of both of them in their whites.)
The movie is about a man named Jacques (Cox) who runs a deadbeat bar in New York, "like a bar in a Eugene O'Neil play." Dano, meanwhile, is a young homeless man with healing powers who comes to the bar and heals all the men there -- including Jacques, who "is always in the hospital, nearly dying." In thanks, the homeless man is taken under Jacques' wing, to take over the bar, but things get tricky when a Hungarian air-hostess creates a triangle between the two men.
And then, at some point, they must find themselves committed. They're certainly not in a normal hospital if they're walking around on their own and playing frisbee. Whatever the case, the mixture of Dano and Cox sounds excellent, and it should be worth the crazy, healing, dramatic adventure.
Posted Apr 30th 2008 7:32PM by Eric D. Snider
Filed under: Thrillers, Sundance, Magnolia, Distribution, Cinematical Indie
I told you a couple weeks ago how THINKFilm had picked up the gritty prison thriller The Escapist, and how the film, which stars Brian Cox, was the last thing I saw at Sundance this year. Well, I actually had a double helping of Cox that January night, because right before The Escapist I watched Red, another film boasting a terrific Cox performance -- and now it's headed for theaters, too.
Via The Hollywood Reporter we learn that Magnolia has picked up Red, with plans to release it late this summer. The film (which I reviewed here) is a thriller along the lines of Death Wish, only instead of avenging his wife's murder, the Cox character is going after the punks who killed his dog. (Do not mess with a man's dog!)
Continue reading Magnolia Will Serve Up 'Red,' Cox
Posted Apr 12th 2008 11:02AM by Eric D. Snider
Filed under: Drama, Independent, Sundance, ThinkFilm, Distribution, Cinematical Indie

The very last film I saw at Sundance this year, at a lively 10 p.m. screening and seated next to the dapper James Rocchi, was
The Escapist. It was a perfect ending for the festival, and a great "guy movie" to boot (Rocchi and I are nothing if not burly, rugged men): Brian Cox leads a bunch of Limey blokes, including Joseph Fiennes, on a daring escape from a British prison. Familiar premise, but well executed with a few twists. Rocchi's rave review is
here.
The flick was well received during its world premiere at Sundance, and yet somehow it didn't get picked up by any distributors before the fest ended. Now, finally, THINKFilm has come to the rescue.
Variety reports that the distributor has paid about $1 million for the film and plans to release it in October, starting small and expanding over the course of several weeks.
Continue reading 'The Escapist' Will Break In to Theaters This Fall
Posted Feb 2nd 2008 6:32PM by James Rocchi
Filed under: Drama, Thrillers, Sundance, Theatrical Reviews, Festival Reports, Cinematical Indie

Our post-modern age makes it easy (indeed, possibly too easy) to find takes or spins or twists on traditional stories or genre films; what's often harder is finding well-executed examples of those genres in the first place. (Put more bluntly, we've all seen plenty of recent ironic crime films or teen comedies -- but how few of those actually work as crime films or teen comedies?) The British film
The Escapist, which made its North American debut at Sundance this year, not only works as a brilliant, twisting existential expansion of the traditional prison break film; it also works as a crackerjack example of the traditional prison break film.
Brian Cox stars as Frank, a convict serving a life sentence; after hearing of his daughter's second overdose, he determines that he has to get out, he has to see her: "I have to make things right."
As played by Cox, Frank's hard to understand, but easy to like -- and the other way around, too. Cox is one of our best actors -- he's great in both high art and high trash, and
The Escapist offers him a chance to work both ends of that divide. We watch, riveted, as Frank tries to break through the metaphorical wall around his feelings; we watch, riveted, as Frank tries to break through the literal walls keeping him from the outside. Frank's demeanor is pure prison -- a hot-forged alloy of defiance and resignation tempered by time -- but he's also more than just that facade.

Continue reading Sundance Review: The Escapist
Posted Jan 21st 2008 9:32PM by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Drama, Casting
Paul Dano's name might not be on the tip of tongues, but you're sure to have seen him, and liked him -- he played Klitz in
The Girl Next Door, Dwayne in
Little Miss Sunshine, and most recently, Paul and Eli Sunday in
There Will Be Blood. (If you haven't seen these, you should. And if you don't like him, why the heck not?!) Now, along with
Explicit Ills,
Where the Wild Things Are, and
The Stanford Prison Experiment,
MTV reports that he's going to be acting in the upcoming film,
The Good Heart with his
L.I.E. co-star,
Brian Cox.
MTV talked with Cox at Sundance, and he said this new project, to be directed by
Dagur Kári, is "a crazed film about a guy who runs a bar, called Jacques [Cox], in New York. It's a bar where all these deadbeats hang out, like a bar in a Eugene O'Neil play." How does Dano fit in? "This young homeless man comes in, and he has these extraordinary powers of healing; he can heal all the guys in the bar. He also heals my character, this guy who has these heart problems. The old man is always in the hospital, nearly dying." After healing the bar owner, Dano's character is taken under his wing so that he may take over the bar when Jacques passes on. Things get complicated when a "Hungarian air-hostess" comes to work in the bar and a triangle forms.
On the one hand, this sounds great. On the other, I can help but think about what it would be like with the previously-rumored stars -- Ryan Gosling and Tom Waits.
Posted Dec 29th 2007 12:32PM by Ryan Stewart
Filed under: Action, Casting, Deals, Fandom, Newsstand, Comic/Superhero/Geek
It took me years to get that horrible Natalie Imbruglia pop song out of my head, and now the singer/actress might be about to return to the spotlight. According to The Herald Sun, the Aussie-born actress was recently in Sydney to film a "secret screen test" for X-Men Origins: Wolverine, which is gearing up production as we speak. No further information was available on exactly what kind of part Imbruglia was testing for, but one can only assume the 32 year-old beauty was up for the female lead. Imbruglia has recently re-focused her career on acting and back in October we noted that she was playing the lead in the Australian drama Elise, about a missing child. She also appeared in a 2003 action comedy called Johnny English, which was unseen by me but was apparently not very good.
Earlier rumors had Maggie Q latching onto a lead female role in X4, but nothing has been confirmed yet and there's always a possibility that there could be a female villain in the mix. Liev Schreiber is also supposedly circling the role of young Stryker, but we recently passed on the news that Brian Cox is also putting X4 on the resume he's currently sending around, so that adds to the confusion. One of our commenters recently pointed out, however, that the film may be going in the direction of acknowledging that Wolverine is a very old character, which would necessitate the young and old Strykers both being in the film. Makes sense, right?
Posted Dec 22nd 2007 11:02AM by Ryan Stewart
Filed under: Action, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Casting, Deals, RumorMonger, Celebrities and Controversy, Fandom, Remakes and Sequels
Yesterday afternoon I was thumbing through some Sundance e-mails when I came across an interview pitch for Brian Cox, known to one and all for his many acting roles including Stryker, nemesis of Wolverine in X2: X-Men United. For a while it's been known that the role Cox originated was going to be taken over by the younger Liev Schreiber in the upcoming fourth film, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, so how come Brian Cox has X-Men Origins: Wolverine as his top credit on the actor bio sheet I'm looking at right now? An attempt by me to follow-up with the publicist who sent me the bio has been met with silence, so who knows if this was something that wasn't meant to be leaked or just someone's dumb mistake? I can easily see a publicist accidentally writing down X4 when they meant to write down X2. But the wall of silence hasn't yet dissipated. I'll be keeping an eye on this.
The official synopsis for X-Men Origins: Wolverine -- what a clunky title -- states that the film "explores the claw-wielding character Wolverine's violent and romantic past, and his complex relationship with Victor Creed and the ominous Weapon X programs, as well as his encounter with other mutants." Filming is expected to start in a couple of weeks, so if there are any last minute casting decisions to be made, now is the time, I guess. I'd definitely like to see dueling Strykers, but is time-travel a big part of the X-Men universe, cause otherwise I can't exactly see how they'd pull that one off. More likely that if this is true, there will be a prologue or epilogue with Cox getting to shine for five minutes.
Posted Nov 22nd 2007 8:02PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Classics, Cinematical Seven, Lists

Earlier this month a bunch of us came up with a list of the
movie characters we'd love to have thanksgiving with. Now, here's the opposite. The title is pretty self-explanatory, so I don't need to set it up much. But as usual, we invite you to tell us of your own picks for worst Thanksgiving dinner guest. Please try to make it a movie character, though, because none of us know your annoying aunt, and plus this is a movie site.
Hannibal Lecter from Manhunter, The Silence of the Lambs, Hannibal, Red Dragon and Hannibal Rising
If you were to have Dr. Lecter (
Brian Cox;
Anthony Hopkins;
Gaspard Ulliel) to your Thanksgiving feast, you'd want to prepare and cook all the food yourself. Otherwise, you might end up eating human flesh instead of turkey (or turducken, or whatever non-people-based meal you prefer). Then again, you might actually end up the meal, which is certainly much worse than unknowingly tasting Ray Liotta's brains. So, the best thing is to not even invite the guy.
Graham Young from Young Poisoner's Handbook
Another character who might be an interesting guest, but like with Lecter, you'll need to keep an eye on the food, or at least on the tea. Graham (
Hugh O'Conor), aka "the teacup murderer" likes to play with poison, and there's a good chance he's going to spike the dinner or drinks with thallium.
Continue reading Cinematical Seven: Movie Characters I'd Hate to Have Thanksgiving With
Posted Jul 13th 2007 5:02PM by Jessica Barnes
Filed under: Action, Thrillers, Mystery & Suspense, Universal, Fandom, Movie Marketing, Remakes and Sequels

This summer seemed like the end of an era for a lot of the big franchises. Sure,
some might be back, but I just don't think they'll be the same. For one of the last big summer releases,
The Bourne Ultimatum, Universal has launched an
online game, according to The Hollywood Reporter. It was
announced that studio has teamed with Google for a promotional game with the somewhat lame title
The Ultimate Search for Bourne with Google. Players try to hunt down the elusive rouge agent, and at the same time the game takes you on a tour of You Tube, Google Maps and web searches. Participants will have to answer trivia, and find random clues buried on the net to compete for the grand prize of a 2008 Touareg 2.
So far, the marketing for the movie has been pretty typical; just a few
posters and a couple of
trailers, and of course the
Bourne game is another attempt to fully integrate the web as a way of engineering some buzz. You can't blame the studio for wanting to cash in on a little hype, especially when you consider all the
hoopla over those
Cloverfield sites. The highly anticipated final film -- and it turns out it
will be the final one in the series -- is bringing
Matt Damon,
Julia Stiles,
Brian Cox,
Joan Allen, and
Chris Cooper back for one last hurrah. Back in June, Jennifer had reported that instead of going back for more Bourne after this one, Damon was going to be
working on the film version of
Imperial Life in the Emerald City: Inside Iraq's Green Zone by Rajiv Chandrasekaran with
Bourne director
Paul Greengrass.
Bourne doesn't open for a few more weeks, so if you can't wait until August 3rd and you have a way with Google, you could always take a crack at winning that car.
Posted Mar 30th 2007 2:31PM by Erik Davis
Filed under: Action, Deals, RumorMonger, Fandom, Comic/Superhero/Geek
You can call it an accidental slip-up by a writer who wasn't aware of the fact that Brett Ratner wasn't officially signed on to Wolverine yet, or we could be looking at some actual news here. Either way, I'm not very excited. While spitting out a number of comic-related films currently in development, a writer for the Telegraph noted that the much-anticipated Wolverine spin-off flick will indeed be directed by Brett Ratner. Only problem is we had no idea he was attached to the project. Sure, there's been speculation ever since Ratner helmed X-Men: The Last Stand -- but so far the pic has not showed up on his future film slate; right now, he's wrapping up Rush Hour 3 (due in theaters later this summer) and in pre-production on an untitled comedy featuring Eddie Murphy and Chris Rock.
With filming apparently set to begin this fall (we think?), chances are Ratner will make Wolverine his next pic ... regardless of whether fans think the dude is a craptastic director and, like, totally not worthy. Last we heard on the Wolverine front, Hugh Jackman was officially locked in to star, and a script (penned by David Benioff) was all but complete. A few characters rumored to appear in the film include William Stryker (Brian Cox) and Kenuichio Harada/Silver Samurai (Ken Watanabe?). Other than that, everyone involved has been keeping real quiet. Of course, when things are quiet, fans immediately question whether the project is still moving forward. Is Ratner stalling? Are they looking for a new director? Has Bryan Singer kidnapped Jackman? If you had the power to make decisions -- and keep in mind there's no way Singer will be able to fit this film into his schedule if he still intends on making that Superman sequel -- who would you choose to direct Wolverine?
Posted Feb 7th 2007 1:03PM by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Action, Comedy, Music & Musicals, Casting, Deals, RumorMonger, Distribution, Comic/Superhero/Geek, Remakes and Sequels

There's no rest for the wicked. Here's some news bites for today:
- Brian Cox, who played the sinister William Stryker in X2, recently talked about the upcoming Wolverine spin-off while promoting Running with Scissors in the UK. According to the actor, who was previously asked by the filmmakers to be in the flick, the movie will take place '17 years ago'. While it is easy to lather on some old-face makeup, it's not so easy to wipe almost two decades off a face, so he is thinking: "they could do what they did with Patrick and Ian for the start of the third one." Cox is great and all, but is it worth that much effort to keep him?
- The upcoming mockumentary, Live!, has been picked up by Fortissimo Films for distribution rights outside of North America. Making racy moves like Survivor's racial divide seem wimpy, the film follows a TV executive (Eva Mendes) who is trying to produce a real, Russian Roulette gameshow where contestants compete for the chance to win $5 million by putting loaded guns to their heads. I just wish Christopher Walken had a part in the flick. Or, Robert DeNiro. They both do it so well.
- It looks like Walk Hard, the music duo spoof starring Jenna Fischer and John C. Reilly, is preparing to add a current SNL player to the cast. Kristen Wiig, whose impressions on the show have ranged from Drew Barrymore to Katharine Hepburn, is in final negotiations to play Edith, the wife of Reilly's character. I'm not sure how this all fits together, since Fischer is supposed to be the "June Carter" to Reilly's "Johnny Cash."
Posted Nov 11th 2006 1:00PM by Jessica Barnes
Filed under: Horror, Thrillers, Deals, New Releases, Mystery & Suspense, RumorMonger, Newsstand, Comic/Superhero/Geek

While it's pretty
old news that
Bryan Singer has signed on to produce
Trick r''Treat for Legendary Pictures and Warner Bros. through his own Bad Hat Harry Productions, some new cast announcements in Variety have made the film a mini
X-Men reunion.
Michael Dougherty, who was a writing partner on
Superman Returns and
X2 wrote the
script and will direct. The plot revolves around a small town one Halloween night, and will throw a bunch of interconnected stories at us, including one that involves a high-school principal-turned-serial killer. Singer must have liked what he saw in Dougherty's script because he not only signed on to produce, but plans on being present on set throughout production. The reunions don't stop there though --
Anna Paquin (Rogue) and
Brian Cox (William Stryker) from the first two
X-Men films have signed on to star. Leslie Bibb and Dylan Baker round out the rest of the cast thus far
This is Dougherty's first time directing a film, which might explain Singer's close involvement. Singer is also currently busy with the Superman sequel and the upcoming
You Want Me To Kill Him? for 2007.
Trick 'r Treat has already started filming in Vancouver but a release date has not been set -- gee, a horror movie about Halloween? I wonder what date they will choose to release it?
[via
Movie Web]Posted Sep 6th 2006 5:34PM by Erik Davis
Filed under: Drama, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Deals, DIY/Filmmaking, Newsstand
Though still in its toddler stages, Keith Calder's financing and production company, Snoot Entertainment, is wasting no time chasing after the big, ambitious projects. According to Variety, Snoot has picked up the film rights to Robert J. Sawyer's (pictured right) novella Identity Theft, which marks the company's first live-action feature.
Using the planet Mars as a setting (hmm, I wonder if the color red will appear a lot?), story revolves around a private eye who is hired to find the husband of a beautiful woman after he turns up missing when the couple transfer their minds into artificial bodies. (Yeah, how about they find a way to transfer muscles into my body? Ya know, without me having to do stuff ... like go to a gym and, um, lift something.) With private financing and outside equity investors, Snoot's other projects include the CGI animated film Terra, which is currently in production and stars the voices of Evan Rachel Wood, Brian Cox, David Cross, James Garner and Danny Glover, among others.