Friday, 16 June 2017

Win a Transformers: The Last Knight prize pack

Win a Transformers: The Last Knight prize pack


To celebrate the release of Transformers: The Last Knight, you can win a prize pack!


TRANSFORMERS: THE LAST KNIGHT
Humans and Transformers are at war, Optimus Prime is gone. The key to saving our future lies buried in the secrets of the past, in the hidden history of Transformers on Earth.

For one world to live the other must die
Directed by Michael Bay

Starring Laura Haddock, Mark Wahlberg, Anthony Hopkins, Isabela Moner
Rating TBC

Transformers: The Last Knight hits cinemas June 22nd

To win a prize pack all you have to do is enter simply email your details to this  address: darrensworldofentertainment@gmail.com or CLICK HERE NOW!

Include your name and address and title your email OPTIMUS!

Competition closes June 22nd

Good luck!



Win a Despicable Me 3 prize pack

Win a Despicable Me 3 prize pack


Illumination, who brought audiences Despicable Me and the biggest animated hits of 2013 and 2015, Despicable Me 2 and Minions, continues the adventures of Gru, Lucy, their adorable daughters—Margo, Edith and Agnes—and the Minions in Despicable Me 3.

Directed by Pierre Coffin and Kyle Balda, co-directed by Eric Guillon and written by Cinco Paul & Ken Daurio, the animated film is produced by Illumination’s Chris Meledandri and Janet Healy, and executive produced by Chris Renaud.

Joining Steve Carell and Kristen Wiig in Despicable Me 3 is Emmy, Tony and Grammy Award winner Trey Parker, co-creator of Comedy Central’s global phenomenon South Park and the Broadway smash The Book of Mormon.

Parker voices the role of villain Balthazar Bratt, a former child star who’s grown up to become obsessed with the character he played in the ‘80s, and proves to be Gru’s most formidable nemesis to date.

Despicable Me 3 hits cinemas June 29th

To win a prize pack all you have to do is enter simply email your details to this  address: darrensworldofentertainment@gmail.com or CLICK HERE NOW!

Include your name and address and title your email BANANAAAAAAAAAAAA!

Competition closes June 29th

Good luck!



Playable story demo for MARVEL VS. CAPCOM®: INFINITE

Playable story demo for MARVEL VS. CAPCOM®: INFINITE



CAPCOM RELEASES MARVEL VS. CAPCOM®: INFINITE STORY DEMO
AND CONFIRMS MORE PLAYABLE CHARACTERS
Standalone Demo Introducing the Cinematic Story Mode Releases Today
and Gives Players Infinite Ways to Battle Against the Evil Forces of Ultron Sigma

Sydney, 13th June 2017 – Capcom, a leading worldwide developer and publisher of video games, today announced the release of a standalone playable story demo for MARVEL VS. CAPCOM®: INFINITE, the next evolution of the popular action-fighting series. Beginning today, the free story demo will be available to download on the PlayStation®4 computer entertainment system and Xbox One® systems and provides a sneak peek at the introduction to the highly anticipated story mode – the first of its kind in franchise history.

With the release of the new story demo, fans are now able to delve deeper and immerse themselves in MARVEL VS. CAPCOM: INFINITE like never before. This thrilling cinematic experience puts players at the center of a fierce battle as heroes from both universes come together to stop Ultron Sigma, the combined form of the robotic villains Ultron and Sigma, from infecting all biological life on the newly-merged Marvel and Capcom worlds. With the future of their universe hanging in the balance, the heroes must seek aid from the Mad Titan Thanos, the most powerful villain in the Marvel Universe...but can they trust him?

Announced today, more Marvel and Capcom characters have joined forces against the supervillain Ultron Sigma in MARVEL VS. CAPCOM: INFINITE:
  • Marvel
  • Capcom
  • Thanos
  • Dante
  • Gamora
  • Zero
  • Nova
  • Spencer
  • Doctor Strange
  • Arthur

Each newly added character, including franchise newcomer Gamora, will feature unique abilities and iconic special moves as they join 14 other previously announced characters and battle together in an attempt to overthrow the devastating new threat. All of the action in MARVEL VS. CAPCOM: INFINITE takes place in new but familiar settings, as famous locations from the Marvel and Capcom universes merge together as part of Ultron Sigma's nefarious plot. These include areas such as"Knowmoon," a combination of the celestial outpost Knowhere from the Marvel Universe and Third Moon from the Strider® series, "Xgard," a mixture of Thor’s homeland Asgard and Abel City from the Mega Man® X series, and many more.

Imagined and created through a shared vision between the two companies, MARVEL VS. CAPCOM: INFINITE will feature free-form 2v2 team battles integrated into a wide variety of exciting and accessible single player modes and rich multiplayer content for new players and longtime fans alike. In addition to the compelling cinematic story experience, single player Arcade, Training and Mission modes plus vast multiplayer offerings will provide memorable experiences and infinite gameplay possibilities for players of all skill levels. The use of powerful, game-changing Infinity Stones further deepens the customized gameplay and allows players to equip and unleash elemental in-game powers, such as Reality, Time, Power and Space.

All editions and versions of MARVEL VS. CAPCOM: INFINITE will simultaneously release on September 19, 2017

Thursday, 15 June 2017

More NZ films announced at NZIFF 2017

More NZ films announced at NZIFF 2017



Four New Zealand feature-length films have been announced today for the New Zealand International Film Festival (NZIFF).

Two world premieres of New Zealand films are also confirmed. Waru, a striking gathering of eight different stories centred around a tangi, will have its world premiere in Auckland. Human Traces, the debut feature from Nic Gorman, will have its world premiere in Christchurch before screening in Auckland and Wellington. Jackie van Beek’s debut feature, The Inland Road, which premiered at the Berlin Film Festival in February will have a NZ premiere in Auckland. Toa Fraser’s 6 Days, a NZ/UK co-production starring Jamie Bell and Abbie Cornish, will open in the UK while simultaneously premiering at NZIFF in Auckland.

“World premieres of NZ films make for some of the most rewarding audience experiences at NZIFF. We’re thrilled to host the world premiere of Waru in Auckland, an event that promises to be moving and memorable. And Christchurch will host the world premiere of Nic Gorman’s Human Traces, shot in and around the Catlins and Banks Penninsula. We also welcome the chance to present the NZ premieres of two features that have already found an international audience. Toa Fraser’s 6 Days is a thrilling portrayal of a terrorist attack on British soil, and Jackie van Beek’s The Inland Road is a confident debut featuring fresh faces in the lead roles.” says Gosden.
Waru

The confirmed titles announced today are:

Waru (World Premiere)
Eight stories are threaded together on the morning of a tangi for a young boy killed by his stepfather. Told through the eyes of eight different female filmmakers and each shot in one continuous take.

Human Traces (World Premiere)
Director/Screenplay: Nic Gorman
Shot on location against the rugged backdrop of the Canterbury and Otago coasts, this atmospheric Kiwi thriller marks a confident calling card for its up-and-coming writer-director.

6 Days
Director: Toa Fraser
Kiwi filmmaker Toa Fraser showcases his action chops on the world stage with this true-story hostage thriller set in 1980s London. Starring Jamie Bell, Mark Strong and Abbie Cornish.

The Inland Road
Director/Screenplay: Jackie van Beek
A runaway girl explores unsteady paths of emotional rescue with a young Central Otago family in writer/director Jackie van Beek’s gentle and lyrically filmed debut feature.
“This sensitively observed drama is shot through with kindness, compassion and compelling stillness.” — David Rooney, Hollywood Reporter 

New Zealand feature-length documentaries have previously been announced for NZIFF 2017: My Year With Helen from director Gaylene Preston; Florian Habicht’s Spookers; Annie Goldson’s Kim Dotcom: Caught in the Web; Paul Wolffram’s What Lies That Way; Robin Greenberg’s TEAM TIBET: Home away from Home; Head Like A Hole biopic Swagger of ThievesNo Ordinary Sheila by Hugh Macdonald; Shirley Horrock’s tenth documentary Free Theatre; Toa Fraser’s The Free Man with Jossi Wells; Andrea Bosshard’s KobiSimon Ogston’s Bill Direen: A Memory of Others; and Paul Oremlan’s most memorable shags in 100 Men.

NZ films at NZIFF are proudly supported by Resene. NZIFF is run by a charitable trust and encourages lively interactions between films, filmmakers and New Zealand audiences in 13 towns and cities around the country. The full NZIFF programme will be available online from Monday 26 June 7pm, and on the streets from Tuesday 27 June for Auckland and Friday 30 June for Wellington. NZIFF starts in Auckland on 20 July and in Wellington from 28 July in 2017.


Special events in Auckland, including Top of the Lake: China Girl and the Live Cinema performance of It with the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra, will go on sale on Monday 19 June at 9am. Tickets for the Wellington screening of Top of the Lake: China Girl will go on sale Thursday 6 July 10am.

Top of the Lake: China Girl to premiere at NZIFF 2017

Top of the Lake: China Girl to premiere at NZIFF 2017



Jane Campion’s TV Series to Premiere in Full at NZIFF


The festival’s first-ever long form television series has been announced today for the New Zealand International Film Festival (NZIFF).

Top of the Lake: China Girl to premiere at NZIFF 2017
Jane Campion’s Top of the Lake: China Girl, presented by UKTV and SKY, a six-part television series screening later this year on UKTV, will premiere in full at NZIFF. Tickets for this special event will go on sale early in Auckland.

“For the first time we welcome a long-form television series to the giant screens at NZIFF, and it’s the most enthralling six hours I have spent in front of a screen this year. We can promise you an immersive experience in Auckland and Wellington, and due to the six-hour duration the screenings will have two intermissions,” says NZIFF Director Bill Gosden.

Top of the Lake: China Girl (Wellington premiere, then Auckland)
Jane Campion’s next instalment sees Detective Robin Griffin (Elisabeth Moss) returning to Sydney and trying to rebuild her life. When the body of an Asian girl washes up on Bondi Beach, there appears little hope of finding the killer, until Robin realises ‘China Girl’ didn’t die alone.
“With its sharp writing, superior cast, evocative locations, seductively seamy subject matter and delicious performances, Top of the Lake is decidedly back in a major way.” – Todd McCarthy, Hollywood Reporter.
Top of the Lake: China Girl is presented by UKTV and SKY.

Auckland Live Cinema Announcement for NZIFF 2017 is....

Auckland Live Cinema Announcement for NZIFF 2017 is....


NZIFF’s annual engagement with the esteemed Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra sees this jazz-age classic It from English writer Elinor Glyn and US director Clarence Badger brought to life with live music from Carl Davis, conducted by Marc Taddei. 
Clara Bow IT“Clara Bow is at her free-spirited peak, an assured archetype of the early 20th Century modern woman. Bow’s cheeky vitality is ageless, an early echo of the quicksilver Hollywood allure that Marilyn Monroe would bring to screens decades later,” says NZIFF Director Bill Gosden. 
 
Marc Taddei conducts Carl Davis’ score. Marc is currently Music Director of Orchestra Wellington and the Vallejo Symphony in California. His many Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra Live Cinema engagements have included an exhilarating The Wind in 2006, an eerily romantic Nosferatu in 2011 and Carl Davis’ score for Safety Last in 2016. 
Music for this Live Cinema event has been commissioned by Photoplay Productions for Thames Television and Channel 4. Music is performed by arrangement with Faber Music Ltd, London. 
 
“Marc Taddei has played an integral curatorial role in several Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra Live Cinema engagements, including The Wind in 2006, Nosferatu in 2011, Carl Davis’ rendition of Charlie Chaplin’s score for The Kid in 2015. It is a great pleasure to have Taddei collaborating once more with NZIFF for 2017’s Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra Live Cinema.” says Gosden. 
 
Music for silent films has been an enduring strand of the prolific Carl Davis’ activities. His 1980 score for Abel Gance’s Napoleon triggered an extraordinary revival of interest in silent film, and his oeuvre of more than 50 scores for this medium, including Flesh and the DevilBen-HurThe Thief of BaghdadGreed, Intolerance and The General, has brought him international acclaim.

Tickets for this Live Cinema event are on sale from Monday 19 June at 9am. The full NZIFF programme will be available online from Monday 26 June 7pm, and on the streets from Tuesday 27 June for Auckland. NZIFF starts in Auckland on 20 July 2017.

Churchill: Film Review

Churchill: Film Review


Cast: Brian Cox, Richard Durden, James Purefoy, Julian Wadham, Ella Purnell, Miranda Richardson
Director: Jonathan Teplitzky

The director of The Railway Man heads to Winston Churchill's quest for redemption in a character portrait about the man himself.
Churchill: Film Review

Set a few days before the D Day landings of June 1944, Cox's Churchill is undergoing a crisis - troubled by visions of the seas running red while he saunters at the beach, he fears the command to send troops in to remove the Nazis in Europe will lead to wholesale slaughter.

Summoned before King George (a wonderfully subtle turn from James Purefoy), Montgomery and Eisenhower (former Mad Men star John Slattery), Churchill finds his protestations to pull back and wait for everything to be right with Operation Overlord are largely ignored.

With the clock ticking closer to the window of launch, Churchill himself struggles to reconcile both his own past and the burdens of being a leader during the most difficult of times.

Against a backdrop of the 1736th day of World War II and with the horrors and guilt of Gallipoli central to Churchill's mental state, a hunched, portly and wilfully defiant Cox delivers a performance which teeters between poignant and bluster. Squat, angry and channeling the "Nar-zees" intonations of Churchill with ease, Cox disappears into the role with no trouble whatsoever.
Churchill: Film Review

And with his director wanting to shoot plenty of profile shots and moody slow-mo moments of a man puffing on a cigar and exhaling slowly, the portrait is evocatively realised to say the least.

Granted, there are some artistic licences taken with Churchill's last-minute protestations to the proposed landings, but Cox does nothing less than sell the moral dilemma of being a leader in war-time. While there's easily an argument to say very occasionally that Teplitzky over-eggs the dramatic pudding (something he was woefully guilty of during Colin Firth's turn The Railway Man) by relying heavily on the imagery to create the mood, the human edges are what really set this higher than the usual fare.

A wonderfully understated exchange between Purefoy's King George and Churchill is emotionally powerful, and simultaneously draped in tenderness, as the two discuss how Winston's desire to lead from the front is nothing short of foolhardy recklessness. In just 5 minutes on screen, these two actors lift this extraordinary sequence into the echelons of the compelling.

Equally, Richardson's long-troubled wife Clem, while under-used throughout other than to chide and scold the blustering pomposity of her angry husband, has a few scenes where the cost to the humanity and relationship of the central pair is smartly and deftly examined. It's here that Churchill manages to soar, as it rises above its time-ticking melodramatic edges and continual scenes of Churchill shouting out his guilty petulance while trying to navigate mentally quieter waters to appease his conscience.

Perhaps this is where Churchill could have been more successful than it already is.
Churchill: Film Review

With the theatre of war having been inexorably changed these days (to the simpler minded, it's merely the debate before the pressing of a button), Churchill is more successful when it examines the human cost of conflict. It reminds us of the mental consequences of the guilt of leadership, the burden of decision and the regret of past mistakes made.

Thanks to a lead actor who sinks into an almost chameleonic turn, Churchill thankfully becomes more than just a simple portrait of a man troubled by the sins of the past; it becomes a nuanced turn of historical interest, even if its questions of accuracy may dog it after the lights go up.

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...