Earlier this week IMAX and Warner Bros announced they'd come to a three and a half year, 20 picture deal, with titles such as The Hobbit, Dark Shadows, Fury Road, and Batman 3 included in the agreement. Now Warner Bros has made Bat fans even more happy by confirming a release date for Batman 3. The as-yet-untitled Batman 3 will hit theaters on July 20, 2012.

Christopher Nolan will return as co-writer/director and Christian Bale will once again don the batsuit. There's no word yet on the plot or confirmation on when Batman 3 will head into production, but now Nolan and crew have a release date to shoot for. And the July 20th release just adds to the anticipation of the summer of 2012 for all comic book movie fans. Also heading into theaters that summer are The Avengers (on May 4th), the next Star Trek (on June 29th), and the reboot of Spider-Man (on July 3rd). That's a pretty impressive line-up.

Nolan and Bale's first Batman film together, Batman Begins, was released on June 15, 2005 and did $48 million over its first weekend. It was followed by The Dark Knight which lit the box office on fire, bringing in $158,411,483 during its July 18-20, 2008 opening weekend.

I always felt that Revenge movies were kind of boring but HARRY BROWN proved me wrong.

First let me set the scene for you. The movie is about this retired soldier named Harry Brown (played by Michael Caine). His life is simple. He goes to visit his terminally ill wife at the hospital; he plays chess with his mate Leonard in the neighborhood pub and that is pretty much it. He lives in a pretty rough British neighborhood that is overrun with gangs of teenage hoodlums who deal in drugs and harass residents.
Things start to unravel quickly when his wife dies and his best friend is killed by gang members. This pushes Harry to go on a murderous vengeance rampage all while the police headed by DI Alice Frampton (Emily Mortimer) is trying nail the kids who committed the crimes and also prove that Harry is targeting the hoodlums that killed his friend (check out Mortimer’s interview on the movie).

Fundamentally, Harry Brown will remind you of every revenge movie you have ever seen, except that it occurs in a more realistic environment. The bleak public housing and the disenchanted youth that roam the street really add authenticity to the vengeance scenario which brings some originality. Plus unlike other typical (read American) revenge flicks, the hero actually struggles quite a bit to carry out his revenge; which makes you cringe and root for him at the same time. All and all, the story is engaging, terrifying but also a tad predictable.

The acting in Harry Brown is spot on. Michael Caine was believable and engaging as the old vigilante who has trouble breathing as he is chasing down bad guys. Emily Mortimer comes across as the shining jewel of morality in an otherwise dark cesspool of opportunism and misery. Even the kids playing the gang members bring a sense of realism that makes you not want to be in the same room as them. These performances fit very well in building the story to where it needed to get without going over the top.

Harry Brown is a dark, tragic but also fascinating revenge movie that does a great job of both avoiding the usual pitfalls of its genre and adding a very much needed dose of authenticity. Simply put, you will root for the good guy, hate the bad guy and not want to ever visit Britain’s public housing which makes US hoods look like a freaking amusement park. A must see.

Apple brings movies to iTunes Store in France, Ireland

Author's pic

By Charles Starrett

Senior Editor, iLounge
Published: Friday, April 30, 2010
News Category: iTunes

Apple has announced that movies from 20th Century Fox, MGM, Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures, Universal Studios, The Walt Disney Company and Warner Bros. are now available for purchase from the iTunes Store in France and Ireland. In addition to these U.S.-based studios, films from European studios including Pathé, SND and StudioCanal are available in France, while Ireland’s iTunes Store will offer films from E1 Entertainment, Lionsgate UK and Optimum Releasing. Movies are available for purchase on iTunes the same day as their DVD release, and movie rental terms are similar to those in other countries, where the customer has 30 days to start watching a film and 48 hours to finish it once it’s been started. Pricing is the same in both countries, with movie purchases starting at €7.99 for catalog titles, €9.99 for recent releases and €13.99 for new releases, and rentals running €2.99 for library title rentals and €3.99 for new releases, with high definition versions priced one euro more.


If it feels like the movie industry has gone "plague crazy" in the past few years, it's because it has. With the appearance of SARS, bird-flu outbreaks, and the whole H1N1 scare, filmmakers have turned to the concept of the "global pandemic" in order to scare the bejesus out of all of us with frightening regularity. However, not every plague film scheduled to hit theaters is set in modern times or about some crazy new virus threatening to wipe us all out. Instead, some filmmakers are going back to the granddaddy of all marauding diseases, the Bubonic plague. There are currently two films set in the dark days of the Black Death scheduled for release in the not too distant future, the Nic Cage vehicle Season of the Witch and Christopher Smith's Black Death. A new trailer debuted for the latter film yesterday.

In Smith's newest release, Sean Bean plays a knight named Ulrich who's dispatched (along with a band of mercenaries) to a remote village that seems to be immune to the effects of the plague. They're tasked with tracking down a necromancer -- a powerful sorcerer who can bring the dead back to life. It's due in theaters in the UK on May 28th.

Naturally, all this pandemic talk inspired me to start thinking of some of my favorite plague films. There are plenty of worthy contenders -- everything from Outbreak to Bergman's The Seventh Seal (which features the plague as a backdrop, but still counts). With that in mind, hit the jump to check out the new Black Death trailer and three of my favorite movies featuring potentially world-destroying epidemics.


It may be blasphemy in some horror circles to say this, but I prefer 28 Weeks Later over 28 Days Later. Both films feature a "rage virus" that spreads through humanity, turning anyone who gets it into raving, blood-spewing monsters. Juan Carlos Fresnadillo's follow-up has always felt more streamlined narratively and way more intense in terms of tone. This is to take nothing away from Danny Boyle's original -- which is a fantastic film in its own right -- but 28 Weeks is the one I come back to most often. In it, the plague that overtook England has been contained and efforts are being made to slowly repopulate London. Since it wouldn't be much of a story if everything went smoothly and according to plan, you can probably guess that the virus isn't quite as eradicated as the science people had hoped. Next thing you know, the disease is back and spreading like crazy. What ensues is the harrowing journey of two siblings trying to escape the city.

The Masque of the Red Death is one of my favorite Edgar Allan Poe stories, and Roger Corman's 1964 version (he would take another stab at in 1989, but he wouldn't direct) is not only one of my favorite Corman films, but one of my favorite epidemic stories as well. Screenwriter Charles Beaumont was charged with adapting the haunting story of a Prince who hosts a debauched party at his medieval castle while the Red Death stalks the countryside -- killing anyone who contracts it within 30 minutes. Vincent Price tackled the lead role, playing Prince Prospero and it's a great performance from one of horror cinema's most enduring icons. The film also benefits greatly from the lush cinematography of Nicholas Roeg (who would go on to direct Don't Look Now). I can't recommend this one enough. A classic plague story, a fine performance from Price, and some of Corman's best direction make The Masque of the Red Death a real standout in this subgenre.


Vincent Price turns up on the list yet again, this time as Dr. Robert Morgan in Ubaldo Ragona's The Last Man on Earth. The film is an adaptation of Richard Matheson's novel I Am Legend (which was remade in 1971 as The Omega Man, starring Charlton Heston and as I Am Legend with Will Smith in 2007), but for me, the Vincent Price version is the best. Price is the lone survivor of a deadly plague that's wiped out humanity, only he's not as alone as he thinks. Each night, other "victims" of the outbreak rise up as vampires/zombies with a thirst for his blood. The film does an amazing job of capturing the existential despair of Morgan's daily existence as the last man on Earth. The doctor spends the daylight hours hunting down and killing his sleeping enemies and then holes up in his fortress-like home after dark. As many have noted, the film clearly seems to have had an impact on George Romero's Night of the Living Dead -- the scenes of the monsters trying to break through the defenses of Morgan's abode are very similar to ones Romero would employ in his film a few short years later.

The 136th annual Kentucky Derby is tomorrow. To get into the mood, here are some classic races from all over featuring creatively-named horses. The first four feature sportscaster Tom Durkin lending his abilities to the silliness.



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