Tuesday, April 28, 2015

I Am Link

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--- Somebody To Love - We'll be getting lots of Cannes stuff over the next couple of weeks; stuff like those MacBeth pictures we just posted, and stuff like this: The Playlist has all the info on Gaspard Noé's upcoming and clearly controversial film Love, which is already courting it with a full-on cum-shot poster, including the film's title written out in jizz. I feel like I am watching a tennis match between Gaspard and Lars Von Trier right now. Anyway Love stars in the leading-man role one Karl Glusman, who we just posted shirtless pictures of a few weeks ago when he got cast in Nicolas Winding Refn's horror movie The Neon Demon. We are on the ball! Anyway dude is sexy, as you can see, and now Gaspard's got me curious how much of Mr. Glusman we'll be seeing in this art porno.
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--- Red Everywhere - Guillermo Del Toro won an award at the San Francisco International Film Fest and he got to give one of his typical rambling interviews where he bounced from topic to topic to topic with profane abandon - the bit about the ending of Pan's Labyrinth is interesting; and he's also continuing to make it clear that we should expect Crimson Peak to earn its R rating like gangbusters.
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---  She Follows Up - Super happy (but not surprised in the slightest) to see burgeoning horror icon Maika Monroe (she of The Guest and It Follows) booking big roles - happy because she's great; not surprised because she's super hot. She's just landed a role in the Independence Day sequel. I didn't say "good" mind you; I said "big." She is super though. Watch out, Amber Heard! And speaking of It Follows, director David Robert Mitchell is going to make a horror show called Mr. Postman, about a postal worker investigating the creepy people on his route.
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--- Down In DC - Common got to much praise for his perfectly fine song from Selma that it almost feels sacrilegious at this point to criticize the man but the dude is not a good actor, he just isn't, so I'm not really tremendously enthusiastic reading he might be the main villain Black Manta in the Aquaman movie. That said in theory it's cool that both leads in the film would be non-white. There are rumors he'll be showing up in Suicide Squad first. And now that I've brought up Suicide Squad... uhh what are y'all's thoughts on that "Jared Leto as Joker" image that popped up over the weekend? I feel as if all the jokes have been made by now, I'm too late. Here's my secret hope though: Leto plays the character like Terry Richardson.
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--- Dear Death - Horror director Adam Wingard, who's already got a couple of classics under his belt with You're Next and The Guest, has signed on to direct an adaptation of the horror manga Death Note next, which has already been turned into two movies in Japan. I even think I saw one of them? It's about a supernatural notebook that will kill the person whose name you write down in it. Yeah it's silly. Silly can be fun though.
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--- Big Dong Daario -- I don't know how I missed this but apparently Playgirl offered Michiel Huisman big buckaroos to pose for them - even though I clearly would like to see more of his very attractive genitals, I still love his response: "They never reached me. Maybe my team was like, ‘No way' [before they could ask me]. Listen, I’m very flattered by the attention that some of that has gotten but no, I’m not going to do that. Of course not." Boner-killer. Oh and our pal Jarett got to interview Michiel last week over at Buzzfeed, and we hate him now accordingly for it.
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--- Small Screen Maestro - Wes Craven has inked a deal with NBC Universal to shepherd three new TV series for SyFy - one's an adaptation of The People Under the Stairs (hilariously described as "Downton Abbey meets The Amityville Horror") one's a deep space science-fiction thing, and the third sounds the most interesting and sounds like Wes might be the most involved with - it's called We Are All Completely Fine and is described thus:

"We Are All Completely Fine tells the story of Dr. Jan Sayer, an enigmatic psychologist who gathers survivors of five horror-movie scenarios in a support group – and unwittingly unlocks the evils of her patients’ pasts. As their traumas are brought back to the surface, they uncover which monsters they face are within — and which are lurking in plain sight. "
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--- And Finally, Hannibal creator Bryan Fuller gave a pretty big interview with Digital Spy on the new season, spilling all sorts of beans on what we can expect from the suave serial killer and his friends this summer. If you want to go in with a completely wiped mind don't click that link but I don't think he gives anything away that'll ruin your enjoyment of the show; plot matters of course but mood mood, it is the mood that makes it. Oh and here's a picture of me and Bryan hanging out this weekend because I'm still pretty gleefully dumbstruck over the fact that I can actually call this genius my friend. Watch Hannibal!
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A photo posted by Jason Adams (@jasonaadams) on
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8 comments:

mangrove said...

Repeat after me: Gaspard Noé - Gaspard Noé - Gaspard Noé - ...

Simon said...

Ok I'm here in Toronto and have been unable to view digital spy for months now. Not on my iPad or my desktop. So frustrating.

Jason Adams said...

Crap I type too fast and spell-check too infrequently. Sorry for that, mangrove. I will fix it now.

Jason Adams said...

Simon, here's the full-text of the interview, cut and pasted, just for you:

PART ONE:

If you're counting the days (and let's face it, you are) until the delayed third season of Hannibal finally kicks off on NBC, we feel your pain.

So does showrunner Bryan Fuller, a self-described Fannibal who generously jumped on the phone with Digital Spy this week for an in-depth chat about all things season three.

We're pretty sure Hannibal would disapprove of snacking in between meals, but these 11 morsels of new info from Fuller should be just sufficient enough to whet your appetite without ruining it.

1. We'll get a little 007-style action in the early episodes.

"I love Ridley Scott's Hannibal, I just think it's such a fun, gruesome movie that kind of harkens back to Hammer films, and it's Hannibal as James Bond," Fuller enthused. "There's qualities of that that we wanted to bring to the first chapter of the third season, which is the Italy-based material."

We're guessing the motorbike and leathers will play a role here.

2. The season premiere 'Antipasto' is all about Bedelia Du Maurier and her years-long relationship with Hannibal Lecter.

"It really does feel like 'What are we watching?' Will Graham isn't in it, none of the other familiar characters are in it, it's just Hannibal and Bedelia and their history over three different periods of time."

Jason Adams said...

PART TWO:


3. ... But even in Florence with Bedelia, Hannibal's still pining for the one who got away.

"In that first episode all about Bedelia and Hannibal, there's just a hint of 'Wouldn't this be better if it were me and Will Graham?' in terms of Hannibal thinking that, and what he misses. Because Bedelia will always be Hannibal's psychiatrist, she'll never be necessarily as intimate and passionate in her relationship with Hannibal as Will and Hannibal are."

4. The rumors are true – we're dropping the cuisine-based episode titles for the second half of season three.

Episodes eight through thirteen will all be named after William Blake's series of Great Red Dragon Paintings, depicting scenes from the biblical Book of Revelation. Clued-up Fannibals will know that in the Harris canon, serial killer Francis Dolarhyde is obsessed with this series of paintings, which give his murderous alternate personality its name.

And we've got specifics. Episode eight is 'The Great Red Dragon...', episode nine is '...And the Woman Clothed in Sun', episode ten is '...And the Woman Clothed with the Sun', and episode eleven is '...And the Beast from the Sea'.

Fuller didn't name episodes twelve and thirteen, but going by this pattern we're guessing that twelve and thirteen will be named 'And the Number of the Beast Is...' and '...666' respectively.

5. Worried about Will's dogs? So are we. But fear not – Fuller confirmed that somebody has been taking care of them while Will and everyone he knows are recuperating from the massacre: "We indicate who is taking care of them, without overly answering it... it is addressed in some way."

6. Richard Armitage's Dolarhyde will be treated more like a third lead character than a supporting player in the season's second chapter.

"He is in the show almost as much as Hugh and Mads are in the second half of the season," Fuller revealed. "So we really spend a lot of time with Dolarhyde, in a way that neither of the movies have had the real estate to."

7. Dolarhyde's story will be a true tragedy, developed with more painful psychological depth than season two's gleefully sadistic Mason Verger.

"A lot of what we see with Dolarhyde is just him alone in a room struggling with his insanity. I wanted the audience to be so confused with this character because we get to know him, and we get to see this man who is suffering, from his mind eating him alive from the inside out."

Jason Adams said...

PART THREE

8. Between her troubled patient history and her increasingly treacherous relationship with Hannibal, comedy hasn't been high on the agenda thus far for Bedelia. That's all about to change, in episode six specifically.

"Gillian has quite a big role in the first half of the season, and she's hilarious. There's one episode in particular where she is laugh-out-loud funny, and I can't wait for people to see that because she's just a delight."

9. Hannibal and Will's reunion will be bittersweet, emphasis unexpectedly on sweet.

"There's a scene that is so touching, when they're finally reunited and able to have a conversation. Mads and Hugh and their friendship are such amazing assets to the show, and you see all of that. It's like 'It's really good to see you, but this is a terrible situation that we're in, and you're actually a terrible person, but I've found a way to forgive you in the way you forgive a shark for being a shark'."

So that "I forgive you" we saw from Will in the season three trailer? Probably genuine.

10. Gore-hounds (and gore-phobes) should look out for episodes seven and twelve in particular – those are where Fuller hints that the "freakiest stuff" lies. One scene in episode twelve involving Dolarhyde was so intense that it drew gasps from the crew during filming.

"It's one bit in particular that's from the books, and we see it probably more graphically on our show than you have in any of the movies.

"When we did that scene, you're supposed to be silent when you're watching, but the entire crew gasped and shrieked. So you're watching the dailies and you're seeing this horrible thing happen, and you just hear all these gasps coming from behind the camera, and it's so much fun! It's so disturbing that it affected the crew."

11. If you want to get a sense for how a fourth season of Hannibal would look, pay very close attention to the first seven episodes of season three.

"It felt like a breath of fresh air not being in Quantico, and not having FBI scenes talking about the murder clues. It was so liberating that if we do get a fourth season, there's going to be a lot more of that than there will be anything FBI-oriented. It will probably be our most serialised season thus far, and the first half of season three was really an experiment of 'does this work on our show?' As an audience member and Fannibal, I loved it."

Season three of Hannibal premieres on NBC on June 4.

Simon said...

Much thanks JA. Love MNPP and miss digital spy. Don't understand when the world is taken out of World Wide Web.

Anonymous said...

Hey, Saturnali here -

I see that you watch many a Horror movie, but obviously do not read a lot of Horror fiction.

The Wes Craven series is adaptaiton of a short novel from a previous year, which this year got a sort of a prequel, but I do not want to share too much of information. I would hate for people toi actually read Horror novels and see what lousy things have been spoonfed by TV and movies to them, in oppositoin to grewat and quite scary books.