New War For the Planet of the Apes Poster Arrives. Cinema. Con 2. 01. However, we’re not going to make you go cold turkey. We’ve got to ease you down. So how about we take a look at a slew of new movie posters?
The mystery of Harry Hart and Kingsman: The Golden Circle has finally been solved! Well, the mystery of whether or not he’ll actually be in the film has been solved. The sequel to 2014 film Kingsman: The Secret Service is a matter of months away and filmmaker Matthew Vaughn has hinted he'd like to close the series with a third. After being delayed a few months, Kingsman: The Golden Circle has another new release date, avoiding a clash with Blade Runner 2049. Based upon the acclaimed comic book and directed by Matthew Vaughn (Kick Ass, X-Men First Class), Kingsman: The Secret Service tells the story of a super-secret spy. Let’s get started with this poster for War For the Planet of the Apes, which I dig quite a bit. Sure, it’s very simple, but that’s also why it’s refreshing. The focus here is not bombast, but character, a reminder that the appeal of these new Apes movies derives entirely from us being personally invested in this struggle. The intense look in Caesar’s eyes, brought to life my motion- capture performer Andy Serkis and a brilliant team of visual effects wizards, is a better selling point than all of the half- baked photoshop in the world. Between this poster, the intense new trailer, and Peter Sciretta’s ecstatic response to additional footage at Cinema. Con, this movie cannot arrive soon enough. We haven’t seen a trailer for Kingsman: The Golden Circle, but the footage at Cinema. Con seemed to go over well and I’m certainly excited to see what kind of spy movie insanity director Matthew Vaughn has cooked up this time around. There are a few key things to take away from this poster. First of all, it looks like the members of the Golden Circle (the United States’ answer to the Kingsmen) will utilize tricked- out lassos, a hilarious counterpoint to how the English agents use deadly umbrellas in combat. Second, Colin Firth is back and they’re not even trying to hide it (we’re still waiting to see how they explain that one). Third, Elton John’s role in this movie is large enough that he gets prominent billing on the poster. And finally, Targon Egerton, the actual lead of these movies, is credited third for some damn reason. And finally, we arrive at the poster for Universal’s new version of The Mummy, a movie that makes be break out in mental and emotional hives whenever I think about it. While I’m all for new Universal Monster movies and think that this is a great way for the studio to celebrate its legacy, I’m still not sold on them being massive blockbusters starring movie stars. However, I do like how this poster doesn’t feature Tom Cruise’s name, instead choosing to focus on the monster of the title, played by Kingsman and Star Trek Beyond star Sofia Boutella. It’s simple, but it gets the job done. The Mummy opens on June 9, 2. War For the Planet of the Apes on July 1. Kingsman: The Golden Circle on September 2. Cool Posts From Around the Web. Kingsman: The Secret Service (2. When reviewing Burn After Reading in 2. Mark Kermode theorised that the Coen Brothers had a bizarre dichotomy in their filmography between their genuinely great works (like Blood Simple, Barton Fink and No Country for Old Men) and their overly quirky misfires (such as The Big Lebowski, O Brother Where Art Thou? He opined during his appearance on BBC Radio 5. Live that . His career post- Ritchie is a veritable oscillation between the outr. Kingsman: The Secret Service sees him trying to recapture the energy and innovation that Kick- Ass had in such rich volumes, and while not all of it works, it is a genuinely entertaining spectacle. Both share a love of over- the- top screen violence and a desire to properly interpret comics and graphic novels on screen in the most kinetic way possible. Whatever else may be true of Kingsman (as it shall hereafter be called), it never feels like a product of compromise, or lumbered by needless Hollywood convention in the way that Wanted was. You may not like the finished results in their entirety, but you have to give the filmmakers credit for sticking to their guns in what can be a very unforgiving industry. It takes the juxtaposition of high- end comic book action and the often underwhelming reality of modern life and puts them in a distinctly British environment. Colin Firth's cut- glass accent and immaculate dress sense are the privileged, secretive and gentlemanly elite, tasked with training up Eggsy, the chavvy, carefree and largely directionless embodiment of the working class. Their relationship, like My Fair Lady with knuckle dusters, treads a fine line between parodying the class war dynamic and simply putting it in a fancy suit, but the script is just about strong enough to make it feel believable despite the familiar territory. These range greatly in quality, from the light- hearted, family friendly action of Spy Kids to the tedium of The Da Vinci Code or the utter contempt of The Ninth Gate. Kingsman's main argument for wading through this familiar water again seems to be two- fold; it has visual flair to spare, and it has the confidence to take the piss out of anything it likes regardless of whether it will get away with it. Vaughn and Millar did not call Mark Strong's character Merlin to argue that the Bond series can trace its character dynamics back to Thomas Mallory, any more than the Kingsmen's origins in the aftermath of the First World War is meant to be seen as something portentous or historic. Such decisions are a combination of plot convenience (e. This is a very British film, after all; being a private investigator or private military company would just be vulgar, darling. Given the direction in which the franchise has proceeded since Casino Royale, it's both convenient and coherent to believe that Vaughn's intention here was to make an old- school Bond film with modern technology and shooting styles. He borrows all the bits of Bond that he likes - the explosions, the talkative villains, the gadgets and the hero getting the girl at the end - but doesn't follow the visual grammar of the series as it stands now. Instead of grimly focussing on his hero's face and trying to weave in subtext, as both Martin Campbell and Sam Mendes have attempted, Vaughn gives us kinetic battle scenes which are impeccably choreographed, bookended by dialogue which is both postmodern and shamelessly old- fashioned. Valentine's plan to cull the human race, leaving alive only those whom he deems worthy, is only a hop, skip and a jump from Drax's plans for a new Ayran race in Moonraker. The climactic battle borrows heavily from You Only Live Twice and A View to a Kill, while the training with the parachutes nods clearly back to The Spy Who Loved Me. Other references are more sci- fi orientated, with the exploding heads being Scanners with jokes, and the SIM cards plot device being similar to the reinvented Cybermen from Doctor Who, in the two- parter 'Rise of the Cybermen' and 'The Age of Steel'. Its biggest strength, which it sustains all the way through, is the sheer brio with which it goes about its business and the striking quality of its set- pieces. The massacre in the church, in which Firth polishes off an entire, rage- driven congregation to the sound of Lynyrd Skynyrd's Freebird, is an absolute riot. It manages to sustain its substance - the idea that even the best people could be turned into monsters by the tiniest change in their brain - while giving us more inventive deaths than Quentin Tarantino has managed in a decade, and with a pace and sense of humour that only the climax of Hot Fuzz could hope to match. At its most basic, the film is essentially taking a lot of plot points, character arcs and visual decisions from other, more straight- laced films and playing them for laughs. That would be fine if the film was an out- and- out parody like Airplane!, where even the most likeable characters are a self- acknowledged joke; we rooted for Ted Striker in that film while never being asked to take him seriously. But the more the film wears on and the more it wallows in its adolescent spectacle, the most frustrating and insufferable it becomes. But constantly desiring to make a joke about something does not mean that one can abandon all internal logic. The best comedies, whether about spying or anything more grounded, always maintain a balance between the integrity of their structure and the content at which they are poking fun. Kingsman is a funny film, but it increasingly becomes a film which indulges its desire to make you laugh at the expense of desiring to make sense. It even goes after soft targets, just like Borat did: would Vaughn have dared to show Firth massacring a mosque full of Muslims, or a temple full of Jews? Die Another Day may still be a terrible film, but at least it is structured in a manner which makes it predictably terrible. Kingsman begins solidly and gradually flails around until it decides to end by blowing everything up (and an utterly pointless anal sex joke, which was cut from some versions). Since we are in Bond territory we do not expect equality on a plate, but given how Vaughn and Millar worked hard to give Hit- Girl agency in Kick- Ass, this is definitely a climb- down from their best work. Aside from Roxy, all of the female characters in this film are either helpless and pitiful (Eggsy's mum), cannon fodder (the congregation and Gazelle) or sex objects (Princess Tilde). You almost get the sense, given her Mary Sue- like qualities, that Vaughn was reluctant to include Roxy in too many scenes, lest she spoil this boys- own adventure. It isn't by any means Vaughn's finest hour, lacking the narrative structure and discipline of his best work, and its character decisions and politics are likely to test the patience of anyone other than a teenage boy. But as a refreshing burst of bad taste in a genre that these days is often far too well- behaved, it's hard not to be entertained by it, at least for a short while.
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