Tuesday, 26 June 2018

FF BRAVE EXVIUS & Just Cause 3 Collaboration

FF BRAVE EXVIUS & Just Cause 3 Collaboration




FINAL FANTASY BRAVE EXVIUS LAUNCHES JUST CAUSE 3 COLLABORATION EVENT
Hit Mobile RPG Commemorates Second Year Milestone
with Limited-Time Events and In-Game Rewards

SYDNEY, 25th June 2018 –Square Enix Ltd., today announced that FINAL FANTASY® BRAVE EXVIUS®, the hit mobile RPG that has been downloaded more than 30 million times worldwide, celebrates its second successful year with a new Just Cause® 3 collaboration. This limited-time event introduces numerous characters and a Just Cause 3-themed event to FINAL FANTASY BRAVE EXVIUS 
Starting today, Just Cause 3’s protagonist, Rico Rodriguez, and two additional characters, Mario Frigo and Annika Svennson, will be available through a featured summon, while a fourth character, Teo, will be available through a raid summon. Players can face off against Golden URGA Mstitel to obtain raid points to unlock various rewards.
A new trailer showcasing the Just Cause 3 collaboration can be viewed on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZSacEMKyMU
Additionally, during June and July, a variety of in-game bonuses and rewards will be made available to players in celebration of the second anniversary:
  • Login Bonuses – From 29th June – 11th July and 12th July to 31st July, players will be treated to generous second-anniversary rewards in addition to standard daily bonuses, including special 10+1 Summon Tickets that will guarantee at least one 5-star unit and 5-star Guaranteed EX ticket.
  • Free Daily Summon - From 29th June – 26th July, players may summon one character for free per day.
  • Players’ Vote Campaign - From 29th June – 11th July, all players may vote in-game to select one of four generous promotions, such as a daily free summon. The promotion that receives the most votes will be implemented in-game during the month of August.
  • Weapon Enhancements - Starting in mid-July, players may upgrade previously obtained weapons through a new limited-time stage, which will be a recurring event moving forward.
  • Half off stamina for story missions and trial battles, increased chances for bonus EXP when enhancing units, increased rank limits and much more.

Fans can also celebrate the game’s second anniversary from 8th - 9th December 2018 with fellow players at the FINAL FANTASY BRAVE EXVIUS Fan Festa 2018 at the Long Beach Convention Center in California, USA. Event updates and information on how to purchase tickets will be available here: https://ffbefanfesta.com
FINAL FANTASY BRAVE EXVIUS is available now through the App Store®, and Google Play. The game is available in six languages: English, German, French, Spanish, Chinese (traditional) and Korean.
Related Links:
Official Website: http://finalfantasyexvius.com/
Official FFBE Fan Festa Website: https://ffbefanfesta.com

Life is Strange 2 Ep 1 Release Date Announced

Life is Strange 2 Ep 1 Release Date Announced




LiS2_Full_logo

LIFE IS STRANGE™ 2 IS COMING SEPTEMBER 27, 2018

An all-new 5-episode story begins in September 2018


SYDNEY, 25th June 2018 – SQUARE ENIX® is delighted to announce that the DONTNOD Entertainment development team behind the critically acclaimed, award-winning narrative adventure, LIFE IS STRANGE™, will return with an all-new 5-episode story.

LIFE IS STRANGE™ 2 is coming to XBOX ONE®, the all-in-one games and entertainment system from Microsoft, PlayStation®4 and Windows PC on September 27th, 2018

Coming Soon to Los Santos

Coming Soon to Los Santos



Come July, the nightlife scene in Los Santos will get a major upgrade, thanks in part to the world class DJs – Solomun, Tale Of Us, Dixon, and The Black Madonna – set to take up residencies across new Nightclubs dotting the city.

A perfect cover for all illicit activities, Nightclubs can be customized, staffed, and promoted, offering players a brand new business opportunity.  

Please see below for full details, along with info on upcoming news.


Coming Soon to Los Santos
The nightlife scene in Los Santos is getting a major upgrade. Thanks to the efforts of one well-known, well-connected and somewhat financially sound impresario the underground dance club scene is about to blow open in July.
World class talent have announced their upcoming residencies in Los Santos and fans will soon be packing out clubs and warehouses across town to lose themselves in sweaty, ecstatic bliss to hear new sets from SolomunTale Of Us, Dixon and The Black Madonna while dancing through the night and into the morning.
Nightclubs are the perfect cover for any other operation you might have going, so get in on the ground level as a business partner to open up a brand new establishment, and help the DJ’s make their shows the best ever. Run your nightclub business from setup, design, staffing and promotion; the more popular the club, the faster your secure wall safe will fill up. Management is honest work, a tidy way to keep income from your more seedy ventures with Disruption Logistics, The Open Road, SecuroServ and Free Trade Shipping Co. looking clean as fresh laundry.
Stay tuned for more details, including how to get on the Guest List and earn exclusive rewards...

Official Call of Duty: WWII - United Front DLC 3 - "The Tortured Path" Nazi Zombies Trailer

Official Call of Duty: WWII - United Front DLC 3 - "The Tortured Path" Nazi Zombies Trailer


Good afternoon,

The Allied forces are crumbling under the relentless advance of the Final Reich. General Rideau decides to take one last, dangerous gambit: 

Transport the remaining pieces of Emperor Barbarossa’s legendary sword to the edge of the world. Make the sword whole again and deliver a final death to the Undying!

Watch the full trailer here.

The United Front DLC Pack 3 for Call of Duty®: WWII arrives June 27, first on PlayStation 4. For more info, head over here.

Monday, 25 June 2018

NZIFF 2018 - Talking the film festival with director Bill Gosden

NZIFF 2018 - Talking the film festival with director Bill Gosden


You've hit 50, how does that feel?
It’s the new 35.
NZIFF Festival Director Bill Gosden

Give me some recollections of your very first festival
My first involvement with the AIFF, as it was, was in 1979 and the first recollections are of a strained relationship. I was the administrator of the Wellington Film Festival, which sourced and supplied a substantial number of films every year to Auckland. Search the brochure of the 11th AIFF for any evidence of that contribution, and you won’t find it. That’s pretty much the way it was. After an impressive first decade guided by Wynne Colgan and a committee of cinephiles, the AIFF had dispensed with their services and become an adjunct of the Auckland Festival Society, primarily a live arts events (no relation to the current Auckland Festival). Ironically they still depended on a Film Society further south for much of the programme.
AIFF at that point enjoyed much better relationships with the theatre chains than we bolshie Wellingtonians, and Auckland festivalgoers were treated to the latest of studio-distributed auteur cinema, Days of Heaven, Diner,  great films by Robert Altman and Louis Malle, for example, that Wellingtonians would have to wait months to see. That rankled too.
Before censor Arthur Everard began passing explicit sex videos around 1985, there was money to be had from exhibiting highly restricted movies. In the early 1980s the AIFF was famous for doing just that.  Zeitgeisty films like Rosier the Riveter or My Dinner with André were relegated to weekday matinee sessions, while films carrying the RFF20 certificate – classified as fit only for festival sophisticates -  took headline slots. In AIFF publicity the Canadian anti-porn polemic, Not a Love Story sounded like the very thing it set out to abolish.
Such provocations did not always land well, and there was a mood for change, ushering the return of the Film Society to the fold from 1984.

What are you doing to mark 50 - many remember the celebration booklets, the wonderful poster work - will we get to see them again?
There will be a show of posters and other memorabilia at the ASB Waterfront.
We’ve received some great stories of Festivals past which you can find here. All contributions welcome at 50@nziff.co.nz.
https://www.nziff.co.nz/about/history/celebrating-50-years-in-auckland/
NZIFF 50 years on

What can we expect from your pre-film messaging boards this year - they've become quite the art form, telling people to shush?
We are working on it. Now that some of our best lines grace other cinema screens there’s a challenge to come up with new ones.

It seems like there have been some excellent catches this year from Cannes - you must be happy?
Totally. Shoplifters, Leto, Climax, Girl, 3 Faces, Border, Mirai, Woman at War, the utterly dazzling Cold War, the lovely Grand Bal, the nutso Diamantino… The 30 Cannes films this year have brought enormous variety. Most were secured in the two weeks before deadline. It was an exciting rush to the finish.
Lynyrd Skynyrd
What are the themes for this year's festival - has there been an upsurge in any kind of film-making / any reaction to what's going on in the world?
The themes come to us, we don’t go looking for them.
It’s a big year for Canine Cinema. Parenting is a recurrent theme.
There are more gay women on screen than ever before. Some of the strongest films engage with contemporary social injustice with disarming stealth and grace. It’s a bonanza year for music films, and dance animates every section of the programme, Incredibly Strange included.

The Retro selection which you've curated more than makes up for the lack of an Autumn Events this year - what's the one film which we should bust a gut to see and why?
There are compelling reasons in 2018 to see every one of these films, imho.
They are not ‘Best of’, but were chosen to reflect something of the range of experiences NZIFF has always offered. The flavours of the times that shaped these films remain sharp in each one of them. The world may have moved on but these films still speak their truth vividly and directly.
 Cria Cuervos and The General are two all-time favourites (and not just of mine), so I was especially delighted that both are newly available in superb restorations. Wim Wenders himself says that Wings of Desire looks better than ever in 4K, that the digital processing of B&W takes you much closer to master cinematographer Henri Alekan’s original vision than 1980s printing on 35mm colour film stock ever could.

I'm intrigued by Good Manners, Eldorado, and Custody - tell me more about these.
Good Manners really is one of those less-you-know deals. It slides craftily from genre to genre, incorporating social satire, romance and the Gothic compulsion of an Angela Carter novel. Eldorado struck me as the most informative of the many documentaries on offer about the refugee crisis that impacts so directly on Italy and thereby so alarmingly on the future of Europe. Custody is visceral cinema, an amazingly powerful debut about a ferocious child custody battle.

Leave No Trace looks like it signals the advent of a homegrown talent - do you expect this combination of Winter's Bone and Thomasin Harcourt Mackenzie to be big?
It certainly deserves to be. It’s a spellbinding film, incredibly wise and generous in spirit. We are delighted that Debra Granik will join us in Auckland and Wellington.

A farewell to Harry Dean Stanton as well - seems like something poignant for the 50th?
Lucky was perfect for him. RIP, Repo Man.
Skate Kitchen
Skate Kitchen

I'm hearing very good things about Skate Kitchen....
When these young women take to the streets of Manhattan on their boards, you want to be them.

Equally, The Guilty....

The Danish flair for crime and detection distilled into a more gripping one-man-and-a-phone thriller than Tom Hardy’s Locke.

Tell me about your opening night film Birds of Passage.
A visionary blend of genre filmmaking and indigenous fable.  A knock-out on the giant screen.

Honestly, there seems to be so much diversity this year, has it been hard to fit all the pieces together?
It’s not like a jigsaw (see Puzzle) where there’s an actual solution. We know we will always be posing some hard choices for the most avid festival-goers.

What's the one film you reckon the audiences shouldn't miss?
No film is for everyone, but The General surely comes close.
Buster Keaton in The General
The General

The one film you want to be a big hit with festival-goers.
The one? Are you kidding?

The one film you think everyone will be talking about.
The fashion films are amazing this year. Yellow is Forbidden and McQueen offer all the visual extravagance you could want, but both talk about so much more than clothes. The Vivienne Westwood film is a hoot: she really is the inveterate punk, present but uncooperative throughout the film. She has subsequently disowned it. Do NOT let that put you off.

The one film you think everyone should be talking about.
Holiday is the most provocative outside Ant’s programme. But once again ‘one’ is an intolerable limitation. Capharnaum promises to be the word-of-mouth hit in the way Call Me by Your Name was last year, though for quite different reasons. And nothing made me laugh more in the last year than Chilly Gonzales crowd surfing a Viennese concert hall in Shut Up and Play the Piano.
Holiday
Holiday

And the one film from Ant's programme that you're crazy about.

Liquid Sky.  Unadulterated pre-AIDS 1980s hedonism and fuck-you glam without the filters of hindsight. I also look forward to taking a prime seat at the Civic for Climax, the contemporary equivalent.
Climax from Gaspar Noe
Climax

Just finally, reflecting back on 50 years of the Festival, what have been the changes you've seen in the films, both internationally and locally - and the one thing that makes you proudest about the impact the Festival has annually? 
Changes? There have been too many to address here.
I’m proud that we have kept pace, even set the pace on occasion.  The Film Festival retains its place in the heart of Auckland amongst events and on-screen choices that have exploded beyond the wildest imagining of that optimistic group who set out to invigorate our film-going - and our film-making - in 1969.

2018 New Zealand International Film Festival launches

2018 New Zealand International Film Festival launches


More than 150 films to screen at NZIFF in Auckland

Auckland NZIFF programme launched for 2018


The full programme for the 50th New Zealand International Film Festival has been launched in Auckland this evening. 155 feature-length films from 40 countries will screen over 18 days beginning on Thursday 19 July.

The festival turns 50 in Auckland this year and a series of retrospective screenings are planned to mark the anniversary.

“I believe we have kept faith with that optimistic group who set out to invigorate our film-going - and our filmmaking – back in 1969. We have kept pace with enormous change – and even set the pace from time to time. While Aucklanders’ entertainment options have expanded immeasurably, I am delighted that NZIFF can still make an occasion out of a night at the movies,” says NZIFF Director Bill Gosden.

The line-up of retrospective films has been programmed by Gosden to screen in amongst the world and New Zealand premieres selected for the festival to reflect the range of cinema experiences that 
NZIFF has celebrated across the last 50 years. The retrospective screenings will culminate in the screening of Buster Keaton’s The General at the Civic with live musical performance by the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra, on Sunday 5 August. An exhibition of NZIFF posters and newspaper clippings from the archives will be displayed at the ASB Waterfront Theatre during festival season.

Canines provide snappy contributions to the NZIFF line-up this year: NZ-made documentary Dog’s Best Friend looks at the work in an Australian animal rehabilitation centre; Pick of the Litter follows the breeding and training programme for guide dogs for the visually impaired; Dogman is the Cannes Competition crime thriller from the director of Gomorrah about a gentle dog groomer who attempts to pacify a human beast.

NZIFF have previously announced that 29 films direct from the Cannes Film Festival are confirmed to screen. Eleven are from the Competition section of the festival including Palme d’Or winner Shoplifters, Jury Prize winner Capharnaüm and Best Screenplay winners (tied) 3 Faces and Happy As LazzaroBirds of Passage, the opening night film from the 2018 Directors’ Fortnight will also be opening NZIFF in Auckland on Thursday 19 July. Cold War from Polish director Pawel Pawlikowski (Ida), winner of the Best Director prize, will screen as the official closing night film of NZIFF. 

Of the 155 feature-length films in the programme, 49 are features or documentaries by female filmmakers. Eleven New Zealand-made films, including six world premieres in Auckland, have previously been announced.

The full Auckland NZIFF programme is available online now: https://www.nziff.co.nz/2018/auckland/

Dark Souls Remastered: PS4 Review

Dark Souls Remastered: PS4 Review


Released by Bandai Namco

Platform: PS4

So, why would you want to punish yourself again?
Dark Souls Remastered: PS4 Review

We all know how depressingly hard Dark Souls can be at the best of times, but the remaster which has relaunched is here to remind you of the fresh hell that there is.

2011 saw From Software's game vault into everyone's best of lists, and saw you die repeatedly as you made your way through an obtuse adventure, aimed at rekindling your perseverance and your desire to be repeatedly punished.

So it's fair to say that the remaster, aside from its improved frame rates and the fact it packs in the Artorias of the Abyss DLC, means you've played it before. It's a shame there's nothing radically new to be added to the mix, but in fairness, Dark Souls is a good game - but given since its launch we've add Nioh, Bloodborne and others, it seems to exist solely on the fact that nostalgia for the game is there to be used.
Dark Souls Remastered: PS4 Review

The RPG elements still work well, and the game still appeals, but given we're about to get a splurge of new content from E3 and that new games are still around to be played (Far Cry 5, God of War's much revitalised revamp), it's hard to fuylly justify why this remaster exists.

The improvement in graphics is welcome, but given everything plays as it did before, the idea of it even existing is puzzling.
Dark Souls Remastered: PS4 Review

Whereas other remasters have built on their previous versions, this one seems to be a bit of a soulless remaster that exists purely because a marketing team said it should.

It's not unplayable, and it's not like the polish isn't welcome, but Dark Souls Remastered needs a little more of a raison d'etre.

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...