Monday, 14 May 2012

New Prometheus images unveiled

New Prometheus images unveiled

There's even more stuff spilling out for Prometheus, ahead of its launch in New Zealand on June 7th.

A whole stack of images from the film have been unleashed - and they're non too spoilery; more intriguing than anything at all...

























































Meanwhile it comes on top of a whole heap of Prometheus content - we've already had the brand new trailer to Ridley Scott's much anticipated sci fi flick, Prometheus.

Warning - a few spoilers lie ahead.




Prometheus, which stars Michael Fassbender, Noomi Rapace and Charlize Theron, returns to the genre that Scott helped define with Blade Runner and Alien. A  team of explorers discovers a clue to the origins of mankind on Earth, leading them on a journey to the corners of the universe where they must fight a  battle to save the future of the human race.

The film hits New Zealand cinemas on June 7th and has already been preceded by a massive viral marketing campaign.....

There's also been a new Prometheus featurette released too...


And here's all the marketing so far...

There's also been some new imagery released from the film too.
















Prometheus hits NZ cinemas on June 7th.
Starring the likes of Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron, Idris Elba, this is likely to be one of the biggest sci fi hits of the year - and we get it a few hours before America does too.




Here's the official trailer for Prometheus...



And if you want to see everything which has been released so far - here it is...
There's also been a heap of viral activity for Prometheus - here's them all rounded up into one easy to monitor place...Something called "Our Family is growing" from Weyland industries...



And of course, the Guy Pearce fronted, TED 2023 talk from the Weyland Industries leader...

New Arkham City DLC revealed

It's turning into one hell of a year to be a Dark Knight fan.

First off, of course, there's the new film coming later this year - The Dark Knight Rises.

And secondly, if you're a gamer, then today's seen some news for fans of Arkham City.

It's just been revealed there's to be a final further DLC for the truly stunning game - here's hoping it'll top the awesome Catwoman Arkham City DLC.



The release says:


"Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment and DC Entertainment bring to you today a new trailer from Harley Quinn's Revenge Pack, the final chapter of Batman: Arkham City saga that adds more than two hours of fresh single-player gameplay to the critically-acclaimed title from Rocksteady Studios. The Harley Quinn's Revenge mission sends players back into Arkham City to face their final challenge as they interchange between playing as both Batman and Robin.

Newcomers to last year’s Dark Knight adventure will be able to pick up Batman: Arkham City Game of the Year Edition in September , which includes all previous downloadable content (Catwoman Pack, Nightwing Bundle Pack, Robin Bundle Pack, Challenge Map Pack and Arkham City Skins Pack) plus Harley Quinn’s Revenge Pack.  Fans who already own the original edition of Batman: Arkham City will be able to download Harley Quinn’s Revenge Pack beginning May 30 on PlayStation®Network and the Xbox LIVE® Marketplace for Xbox 360."

That's not long to go, folks...time to suit up perhaps!?

The Dictator is coming....and he has a message for us Kiwis

It's just days till Sacha Baron Cohen's latest film, The Dictator hits New Zealand cinemas.

And in true style, General Aladeen has a message for us all...

The Dictator hits NZ cinemas from Wednesday 16th May.

Mortal Kombat - PS Vita Game Review

Mortal Kombat - PS Vita Game Review

A look at the handheld version of the famous Mortal Kombat series

Platform: PS Vita
Released by Warner Bros Games

There's just something about a handheld fighting game where gore is the aim of the game and the gameplay is pretty simple.

So it is with Mortal Kombat, the latest one on one smack them in the face until they bleed/ are knocked out fighters series.

Making its way from the console version of the series to the handheld would always be a smart move for the series - and the developers have realised that before they began - and decided the best way to get the best experience would be to include all the DLC characters and have them unlocked from the get go. Characters include Kratos from God of War, Skarlet, Kenshi, Rain and Freddy Kruger as well as the usual MK bunch.

Bringing with it as well, the story mode and the Challenge Tower mode (wherein you have to fight your way through 10 rounds of bloody, gory beatdowns to face the final big bad) as well as tag team mode, there's certainly a lot of portable bite size playing to be had. Plus add in five levels of difficulty and this powerhouse punchup can be as easy or as hard as you want it to be.

In terms of graphics, this is simply luscious stuff - the VITA's OLED screen gives crystal clear imagery and while that may sound like a stupid thing to say given that's one of the basics of the VITA, it really does add to the sharpness of game play. Each crunch and crack of the character is beautifully portrayed onscreen and is never blurred; something which you'd hope for in a fast paced one on one game.

A smartly responsive D pad and buttons mean you're not frustrated in the fights and can engage with the characters right away, as well as expect that your attempts to beat down your opponent will not suffer from freezing or minor control issues. Granted, you can't pull together as many combos as other games, so some of the more devastating moves will take a while to master, but it's worth the time and effort. Throw in some touch screen technology as well for some other games and short of using the PS VITA camera for inserting your own face onto your fighter, this game utilises the best of what the tech has to offer.

With a wealth of challenges, a gallon of gore and blood and a beautifully visual feast, Mortal Kombat has set the bar for the fighting games on the VITA - it's shown you can have a glut of bitesize content as well as a whole cluster of fun.


Rating




Rhys Mathewson vs the World - Comedy Festival Review

Rhys Mathewson vs the World - Comedy Festival Review


Man, if I'd been this talented at 21 years old, the world would so have been my oyster.

Taking to a packed out Basement Studio in Auckland for his final night, it's clear Mathewson's already won the festival fight for crowds. And there's just something about his enthusiasm on stage which is totally infectious.

This year's show is about Rhys becoming a little less self centred and a bit more aware as he bids farewell to the teenage years and enters adulthood at 21. I don't think I know (or knew of) any 20 something who didn't suddenly realise there is a world around them when they're thrust into the wider universe.

But after an intro which sees Rhys flounce about the stage in a boxing outfit, it takes him a wee while to get to the show - mainly, because he's so damn interested in the audience and the front row.

This is perhaps my only criticism of Rhys' show (and it's such a minor niggle) - he gets easily distracted by what's around him and in the audience very occasionally rather than fully concentrating on his show in hand. But you can forgive someone who has such an appealing stage presence and who spends the majority of his (albeit brief) time on stage, having so much damn fun.

This year's show sees Rhys tackle the world around us - taking on the planet in seven rounds in rounds about relationships, the economy, religion and people is no mean feat but once again, despite his young age and showing off the comedy prowess of a pro who's been on the circuit for most of his life, he sucks you into a world of fun, frivolity and occasional filth.

Yet, it's due to self effacing charm, brilliant audience banter and boyish enthusiasm that this show is just so much damn fun; there's so many terrifying visuals in this as well - Rhys as Richard Gere in an Officer and A Gentleman, and a topless moment to name but two.

Sure, occasionally, Rhys distracts himself on his comedy journey, but I'm prepared to forgive him for it as it's only ever because of his comedy chops; there's always something hilarious and deftly smart waiting to pour forth from under the curls and cheeky grin.

Rhys Mathewson is already one of our comedy treasures; proof that young age is no barrier to being hilarious and that New Zealand breeds some of the best live stand up comedians - let's just pray he stays with us for as long as he can because he's already heading toward legendary status.

Saturday, 12 May 2012

Rhys Darby - Comedy Festival review

Rhys Darby - This Way To Spaceship

To say Rhys' return to the NZ International Comedy Festival is much anticipated would be an understatement.

With a packed Sky City theatre and extra dates added, you can tell there's still a lot of love for this self professed dick.

The show kicks off with Bill Napier heading to the stage to get us all warmed up for the main attraction - and the crowd is onside from the very start. With pauses and then punchlines, this character's still a winner for all concerned.

Also, a big winner is support Steve Hughes. He impressed at the Comedy Gala and is starring in his own show at the festival - and based on tonight's performance, it's one you really do have to see. This Aussie comic looks like a chilled out hippy death metal enthusiast but his vibe is seriously good fun. With dry and droll delivery, whimsical and intelligent material, he's got the crowd eating out of his hand as he espouses views on Australia, the "vortex of silence" when playing to Dutch crowds and a very funny sequence over health and safety. Hughes is a commanding performer and a towering talent - when you're still laughing at his gags after an hour of Rhys, you know that's pretty damn good going for a support act.

As for Rhys, well, what can I say that hasn't already been said?

A warm self effacing presence with a clear joy for what he's doing, he basks in the glow of being on stage as he weaves smart gags with physical japery throughout his stand up.

The setting this year is some material from his new book This Way To Spaceship about the worries over the world ending in December 2012 - and it begins with Rhys standing on stage looking a little akin to the Stig from Top Gear as he wakes to find himself in a spaceship. A Conchordian voiceover from a shipboard computer gives a thrill to the audience but it doesn't detract from Rhys' comic prowess.

There's a nice autobiographical feel to his show as well - I think we're all pretty familiar from how he went from lonely geek to well, popular geek but Rhys makes this adventure inclusive via his storytelling; by his lampoonery and lunacy, he makes you feel like it's ok to be slightly different and how ultimately, you do win the day.

Sure, there are his patented sound effects - including some very funny horses at dressage - but this material reduces the audience to fits of laughter as it's presented with a warm deftness that is both endearing and highly amusing.

Granted, a sequence about being an outsider at school may ring truer to some than others (I'm looking at me here) but the Stand By Me style adventure he has with his small (but hella cool) gang of mates is the stuff of pure comic geekery. It's given warmth and such feeling that you can't help but be swept up by Rhys' performance; sure, he's throwing a show on here but he's enjoying every minute of it - and as the audience laps up every second, it's clear he can do no wrong.

Rhys' defining moment comes when he tells the crowd "Keep rocking your own styles - eventually someone will dig it". Yes, Mr Darby, we will - because with you as our extremely affable role model, our chief mirthmeister and much loved Kiwi icon, we know that charisma, charm and comic perfection are something to really aspire to.

Do yourself a favour; beg, borrow or steal the chance to board this spaceship - and Steve Hughes - because the journey is one hell of a great feel good comic ride.

Thursday, 10 May 2012

Dark Shadows: Movie Review

Dark Shadows: Movie Review

Dark Shadows: Movie Review - the film review of the Dark Shadows 2012 film, starring Johnny Depp, Eva Green, and directed by Tim Burton


Cast: Johnny Depp, Michelle Pfeiffer, Chloe Grace Moretz, Bella Heathcote, Eva Green, Jackie Earle Haley, Jonny Lee Miller, Helena Bonham Carter
Director: Tim Burton

So, hands up, who's heard of this series from back in the 1960s then?

Thought so.

The soapy series ran from 1966 to 1971 and was a gothic soap opera around the Collins family, whose head is a 200 year old vampire. Taking in werewolves, vampires, time travel, parallel worlds and ghosts, it was a curio back then.

And really, when you consider its pedigree, it should come as no surprise that Tim Burton and Johnny Depp should reteam for an eighth time to take it on.

The film begins in Liverpool in 1760 with the Collins family relocating to North America to make their name. With riches, they set up Collinsport and Barnabas (Depp) grows up abroad. But when he scorns the love of a witch, Angelique Bouchard (Green) for another, he's cursed, turned into a vampire and buried for 200 years underground.

Nearly 200 years later, Barnabas is accidentally awoken and returns to Collinsport to find the once great mansion in ruin, inhabited by relatives who don't care about the family name and finds the family fishing business is all but destroyed by competition from Angelique Bouchard's rival company.

So Collins sets about trying to recapture his former glory - as well as trying to win the heart of Victoria Winters (Heathcote) who's the spitting image of Barnabas' first true love.

Dark Shadows is an odd curio; it's an absolutely natural fit for the Tim Burton and Johnny Depp partnership, bathed as it is in off kilter moments and Gothic sensibilities. From its darkly chilling opening, it screams Burton's work - from the overly brightened colours to the pale washed out landscapes, it's clearly a horror joint with a backdrop of family tragedy and quirky misfits.

And yet, it's lashed with so much campy comedy that it's never really one thing or the other.

It's once again Johnny Depp's performance which keeps this going; his culture shock comedy at being revived some 200 years later is a blast, referencing the best of the 1970s and also Nosferatu as he skulks around in the shadows as the music of the 70s blasts from the soundtrack. There's plenty of tittering to be had at his facials and carefully pronounced acting which renders Collins a little stiff and starched.

As for the rest of the cast, well, I think to be honest, there's rather a few too many on screen, leading to it feeling like some are underdeveloped (Jonny Lee Miller as a thief being one) or simply there for effect rather than storytelling. Chloe Grace Moretz does well as the daughter with a secret, Pfeiffer is fairly stiff as the matriarch of the mansion, Bonham Carter is simply an orange wig as the family psychologist who's got hidden motives, and Eva Green is more toothy than seductive as the vindictive witch with a chip on her shoulder.

It's a shame because the creepy, spooky atmosphere, visuals and feeling Burton's brought to the screen are brilliant; it's just that it feels a little undercooked and unsure of what exactly it wants to be. There's not quite enough comedy to keep you laughing all the time (and most of the laughs are gentle ones rather than raucous belly laughs) and the drama isn't quite strong enough to pull it all through.

And the finale is pure Burton - a heady mix of Beetlejuice meets Death Becomes Her (as well as an hilarious riffing around the phrase "You make me sick").

All in all, while Dark Shadows is true to its roots and ends on the prospect of a sequel, it'll really need to get more of a definitive mix of campy comedy/ horror and Gothic for any future outings. It's not quite Addams Family sensibilities and humour either, but you can mark this one up as a slightly undercooked, overlong, curio and oddity which doesn't quite hit the mark.

Rating:





Very latest post

Honest Thief: DVD Review

Honest Thief: DVD Review In Honest Thief, a fairly competent story is given plenty of heart and soul before falling into old action genre tr...