Friday, 15 May 2015

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt cinematic launches

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt cinematic launches


A Night to Remember, The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt launch cinematic, has arrived!

Garnering over 200 prestigious awards before launch, The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt is CD PROJEKT RED’s most ambitious endeavour up to date. Set within a truly open world, the game puts you in the role of a wandering bounty hunter and monster slayer, Geralt of Rivia. In The Witcher, you take on the greatest contract of your life -- tracking down the Child of Prophecy, a living weapon that can alter the shape of the world.

The game is scheduled to launch May 19th, 2015, on Xbox One, the all-in-one games and entertainment system from Microsoft, Windows PC, and PlayStation®4.

Thursday, 14 May 2015

Life Is Strange Episode 3 launches next week

Life Is Strange Episode 3 launches next week


We know you’ve all been eagerly awaiting news on Life is Strange Episode 3. It has been brilliant reading all your thoughts and theories from Episode 2, the response has been truly amazing!
We are really excited to finally announce that LIFE IS STRANGE EPISODE 3 - ‘CHAOS THEORY’ will be released May 19th.
In this next instalment of Life is Strange, Max and Chloe’s investigation into Rachel Amber’s disappearance lead them to break into Blackwell Academy after dark, to search for answers. Secrets will be uncovered and Max will find another use for her power.
In this new screenshot you see Max & Chloe attempting to break into the office of Principal Wells. What could they be looking for? What will they find?
Make sure you have played through Episodes 1 & 2 before continuing the story as your choices will carry over to Episode 3…

First NZIFF titles are unveiled

First NZIFF titles are unveiled


Sundance Winners Head to NZIFF
Now we’re talking! Cannes may be underway but it’s the Sundance line-up that we highlight today in our first sneak peek for the year. We began 2015 energised by the sheer vitality of films emerging this January in Park City. The famous bastion of American indie features and documentaries ushered in the year with a multitude of new films worth channelling onto a cinema screen near you. We’re even a little embarrassed at just how many American films we’ve selected as a result – but why be crazy and say no to such a diversity of good ones? NZIFF audiences can look forward to seeing a whole raft of Sundance winners this winter. We’ve chosen four distinct American originals to announce today – and for a little balance, the Sundance World Cinema Audience Award winner from Mumbai.

Meanwhile our Sandra Reid, poor soul, is in the thick of it on your behalf in the South of France. Her mission: to identify and secure the icing for the multi-storied gateau we’ve been cooking up since September.

All the best,
Bill Gosden
The Wolfpack
The winner of the Documentary Grand Jury Prize at Sundance this year, Crystal Moselle’s film The Wolfpack delves into the bizarrely sheltered lives of six brothers whose father has confined them and their sister since birth to the tiny rooms of their Lower East Side apartment.
The Diary of a Teenage Girl
From the Sundance U.S. Dramatic Competition section NZIFF has secured Marielle Heller’s The Diary of a Teenage Girl based on the graphic novel by Phoebe Glockener. Exhilarating in its candour and ironic verve, The Diary of a Teenage Girl recounts the visceral thrills and spills of 15-year-old boundary-pushing Minnie (Bel Powley) as she throws herself into her first affair – with her mother’s boyfriend.
Umrika
Winner of Sundance’s Audience Award for World Cinema, writer/director Prashant Nair’s Umrika is a handsomely produced Bollywood film telling a classic tale of country lads finding their bearings in the big city.
Grandma
In Grandma, a constantly surprising comedy drama from About a Boy director Paul Weitz, Lily Tomlin is hilarious and moving as a sharp-tongued, taboo-breaking granny who comes out fighting for her pregnant teenage granddaughter.
Cartel Land
Matthew Heineman’s unnervingly action-based documentary Cartel Landcaptures the impact of Mexican drug cartels on both sides of the border. With staggering front-line access, Heineman observes the retaliatory forces that have formed in response to oppressive cartel violence and governmental indifference.

NZIFF programmes will be available in Auckland from Tuesday 23 June and in Wellington from Friday 26 June. NZIFF screens in Auckland from 16 July to 2 August, and in Wellington from 24 July to 9 August, with other centres to follow.
Screening times and regions for all films will be confirmed at time of programme launch.
Christine Jeffs to select our New Zealand’s Best finalists.
We are very pleased to announce that Christine Jeffs, director of RainSylvia, and Sunshine Cleaning, has generously agreed to act as this year’s guest selector of finalists in the New Zealand’s Best Short Film competition. Christine is currently writing a screenplay called Amchitka, based on the beginnings of Greenpeace, as well as working on several U.S. feature films.

For the 2015 competition, we received 75 entries which Michael McDonnell and Bill Gosden are currently short-listing to a dozen picks for Christine’s consideration.

Mad Max: Fury Road: Film Review

Mad Max: Fury Road: Film Review

Cast: Tom Hardy, Nicholas Hoult, Charlize Theron
Director: George Miller

"All this for a family squabble"

It's a phrase tossed off the lips of one lunatic in Mad Max which says so much about George Miller's return 30 years later to the post-apocalyptic world he made so iconic with Mel Gibson around 36 years ago.

Mad Max Fury Road is nothing short of a visually nihilistic spectacle; it's a world where hope as a commodity is as rare as oil and the rain in the blisteringly violent deserts that blow all around.

Tom Hardy stars as Max Rockatansky, a man haunted by the fact he couldn't save his wife and daughter and by visions of his child (a nod back to the originals). As the film starts, Max is captured by the heavily radiated white-skinned War Boys and hooked up to the sick as a human blood bag (this film is about as pro-blood transfusions as any health commercial could be).

But Max finds himself front and centre of an epic chase when Imperator Furiosa (Charlize Theron, the buzz-cutted, bionic armed heart and soul of the movie) deviates from a supply run and trade deal, angering the bloated leader of the post-apocalyptic cult of deviants, Immortan Joe (played by Toecutter from the first film, Hugh Keays-Byrne).

So Joe and his gang of misfits set out on a major chase and to unleash Carmageddon on the unbelievers as well as to try and reclaim Furiosa's secret cargo.

Mad Max Fury Road is light on plot, but high on visual insanity.

In fact, it's the lack of plot and near lack of dialogue at the start that convinces you this extreme road movie and video-game style plotting will challenge some who are not on board with the cine-visual meltdown mania of a barking mad director cum visionary Miller.

And for key character (Nicholas Hoult's religious zealot Nux who's desperate for entry to Valhalla in among the vehicular madness) the absence of development means one plot point jars quite badly midway through the piece, a mis-step from Miller who clearly had his eye on the action, rather than those swirling around the unfolding visual carnage.

It is the unrelenting destruction that stands out first and foremost in Mad Max Fury Road - the blistering soundtrack leaves your ears bleeding after the initial first 40 minutes of adrenaline-fuelled highly visceral and carefully orchestrated chaos is unleashed.

Thankfully, the movie slows giving you a chance to adjust and your ears a chance to recover, but it's a brief respite before the action ramps up once again. In those brief moments, Hardy's near-mute Max remains the calm in the storm, handing the emotion and heart to Theron to handle, which she does with a great degree of aplomb.

Looking like Slipknot meshed with Priscilla Queen of the Desert and crossed with Duran Duran's Wild Boys video, the visuals of Mad Max Fury Road are everything and stand tribute to Miller's clear and dedicated vision. Cars with spikes that look like motorised porcupines, bikers with inhabitants that look like they've cosplayed bedouins and Tusken raiders, a truck stacked with amps and a deranged guitarist all create the aesthetics of a world gone mad where chaos rules supreme.

The stunt work and brutal fights raise the bar for blockbuster expectations as this extended car chase plays out, and it's great to see a New Zealand stunt team had a hand in ensuring the vision comes to life. It certainly benefits from being stripped of CGI with live-action favoured in a way that would shame the Fast and The Furious series.

A madcap cinematic orgy of balls-out action, Mad Max: Fury Road stands alone as something visually incredible and completely epic; while the story and characters for the most part, don't hold up to repeated scrutiny, you can't help but salute Miller for what he's achieved.

With furious sound and visual bluster, Mad Max Fury Road is an atmospheric road well worth travelling - even though there are a few bumps along the way.

Rating:



Wednesday, 13 May 2015

Win a double pass to Disney's Tomorrowland movie!

Win a double pass to Disney's Tomorrowland movie


Thanks to my good friends at Walt Disney Pictures, I'm giving you a chance to win a double pass to see Tomorrowland! I've got 3 to giveaway!

It launches in cinemas from May 28th - and all you have to do is email in with the subject Tomorrowland in the title and your name and address!

Email here darrensworldofentertainment@gmail.com 
Competition will close on May 30th - and editor's decision is final!

Good luck!

Tomorrowland:

Bound by a shared destiny, a bright, optimistic teen bursting with scientific curiosity and a former boy-genius inventor jaded by disillusionment embark on a danger-filled mission to unearth the secrets of an enigmatic place somewhere in time and space that exists in their collective memory as "Tomorrowland."

Starring George Clooney and directed by Brad Bird, Tomorrowland is in cinemas May 28th.

The Interview: Blu Ray Review

The Interview: Blu Ray Review


Rating: R16
Released by Sony Home Ent

"I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take it anymore"

Peter Finch in the movie Network and the hackers who threw Sony into disarray have a lot in common in The Interview, which has been the target of either a very smartly chaotic marketing plan or the embodiment of all that is evil in the cinema.

However, with all manner of pre-publicity and talk threatening the launch of The Interview, it's certainly gathered some momentum, with shades of the rather un-PC Team America and South Park: Bigger Longer and Uncut thrown in for good measure.



James Franco once again over-acts as the sharp-suited, false-smiling Dave Skylark, the presenter of a news talk show that deals more in tittle tattle than hard news (witnessEminem coming out on the show and Rob Lowe revealing he wears a wig in obligatory self-deprecating cameos) but scores big in the ratings.

However, his behind-the-scenes guy Aaron Rappaport (Seth Rogen in usual laid-back stoner form) is rattled when at a celebration for 1,000 episodes, another news show producer rails at him for the cheap and tawdry nature of his show.

But the manchild boys are thrust into the limelight when they discover that North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Un is a fan of the show and has granted them an interview. As they prep to head to Pyongyang, the CIA (lead by a largely sidelined Lizzy Caplan) demands they kill Jong-Un for the good of the world....

The Interview is as scabrous, puerile and as scatalogical as you'd expect from the team who brought youPineapple Express.

Ineptitude and goofiness, as well as all things anal consume the uneven script as Franco and Rogen continue their on-screen bromance to largely comic effect. Mixing in racism and a sly piece of satire on the state of the Buzzfeed and continuing celeb obsession of our culture, The Interview works as a piece of comedy that's designed to entertain, occasionally offend and nothing else.

Franco's over-acting initially grates, but proves to be the perfect antidote to the situation in Pyongyang as the star-struck Skylark falls under the spell of Randall Park's apparently insecure, margherita loving, Katy Perry Firework adoring, B-balling Jong-Un (sound familiar, Dennis Rodman?); his resistance to carry out the assassination plays nicely against Rogen's uptight caught-in-the-headlights stooge and gives the comedy the broadness and low-hanging fruit it panders to. Their continued eminent likeability helps you through the odd moment that feels crass and base as this frat-based relationship head abroad.


Caplan's horrendously sidelined in a film that throws out the line "This Is 2014, women are smart now", so perhaps that's a blessing; and Park deserves some credit as the Supreme Leader, channeling moments of Dr Evil-like insecurity, general madness and adding more of a dimension to a character that could have just been a broad parody. Even America and their domestic policy comes under scrutiny, so the writers have ensured that it's not just North Korea who's in the firing line.

With a third act that goes for as much violence and a slow-mo helicopter destruction shot that's clearly going to upset the North Korean leader and nation, The Interview has nowhere to go but up its own butt (an analogy I expect those involved in the film will delightfully relish) and into familiar OTT action territory.


And yet, it's unshakably funny, ribald and pointless to rail against The Interview.

Rogen, Franco and Goldberg have certainly got some cinematic balls to take this on given the furore that Sony's currently enduring; but they've got some even bigger balls to have produced something that manages to avoid the majority of its excesses and turn them into something that seems tame in comparison to outrage that's been levelled at it.


Rating:


Tuesday, 12 May 2015

A Royal Night Out: Film Review

A Royal Night Out: Film Review


Cast: Sarah Gadon, Bel Powley, Emily Watson, Rupert Everett, Jack Reynor
Director: Julian Jarrold

Talk about your fortuitous timing.

Released a week after the 70th anniversary of VE Day and just days after the birth of a new royal Princess, A Royal Night Out couldn't be cresting more on the wave of national ex-pat pride if it tried hard enough.

It's the story of Elizabeth (Sarah Gadon) and Margaret (Bel Powley), who, on the eve of VE Day being declared after years of uncertainty and war, are determined to break out from the palace and experience an evening outside the walls and with the common people. At Margaret's insistence and against a haughty Emily Watson's Queen Elizabeth's wishes, Elizabeth gets her father King George (Rupert Everett) to agree, playing on the insecurity about how his post-war speech will be received.

However, when the duo head out with army chaperones onto the town, they're split up by circumstance; Margaret, determined to embrace the party girl within, ends up on the seedier sides of London and it's up to the prissier and more serious Elizabeth to track her down before they break their curfew...

A Royal Night Out is a screwball farce that seems to attempt to ground the Royals as being like one of us (to paraphrase Joan Osborne)

Kinky Boots' director Jarrold has no desire to bring fully rounded characters to the screen, preferring to concentrate more on creating the atmosphere and euphoria sweeping through London during the evening flag-waving celebrations, which he does excellently thanks to the swinging 40s soundtrack and attention to period detail.

But the whole thing starts to feel like Carry On Princesses, thanks in part to Powley's crowd-pleasing antics and hijinks that teeter dangerously into parody with her toodle-pip plummy accent (Wizard being one of her cries to the masses at a party) and OTT shenanigans, falling in with a spiv (a wonderful turn from Roger Allam) and ending up in a knocking shop.

Equally, Elizabeth's friendship with an airman Jack (played with one dimensional lustre by Jack Reynor) is as wooden as they come, with no hint of any kind of sparks or connection at any point (perhaps a deliberately scripted intention aimed at not causing any offence to HRH) but which stretches credulity throughout.

Though, given this is all flight of fancy material, pitched against a background of patriotism and nostalgia, credulity is hardly high on anyone's agenda.

The one hint of something approaching a tinge of sadness as Elizabeth realises her role will see her torn between her own desires for life and the restrictions of the title is quickly brushed under the carpet; a dramatic conceit that's got no place in this upbeat generic crowd-pleaser.

It's said that The Queen is not amused by this speculation into her and her sister's apparent night out; but crowds are likely to be enamoured with this veritable cheesy souffle, concocted of cliche and pip-pip attitude which skews older; but at the end of the day, A Royal Night Out is as forgettable as they come, a kind of cinematic hangover after the night before.

Rating:


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