Wednesday, 5 December 2018

Win a double pass to see Instant Family

Win a double pass to see Instant Family


To celebrate the release of Instant Family, in cinemas January 10, 2019, you can win a double pass!

About Instant Family

Win a double pass to see Instant FamilyWhen Pete (Mark Wahlberg) and Ellie (Rose Byrne) decide to start a family, they stumble into the world of adoption.  

When they meet a trio of siblings, including a rebellious 15-year-old girl (Isabela Moner), they find themselves unexpectedly speeding from zero to three kids overnight.  

Now, Pete and Ellie must hilariously try to learn the ropes of instant parenthood in the hopes of becoming a family.  

INSTANT FAMILY is inspired by the real events from the life of writer/director/producer Sean Anders, also starring Octavia Spencer, Tig Notaro and Margo Martindale, Julie Hagerty and Michael O’Keefe.
 

Win a double pass to see MARVEL's Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse

Win a double pass to see MARVEL's Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse

To celebrate the release of MARVEL's Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, in cinemas January 3, you can win a double pass.

About MARVEL's Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse


Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, the creative minds behind The Lego Movie and 21 Jump Street, bring their unique talents to a fresh vision of a different Spider-Man Universe, with a groundbreaking visual style that’s the first of its kind.

Spider-Man™: Into the Spider-Verse introduces Brooklyn teen Miles Morales, and the limitless possibilities of the Spider-Verse, where more than one can wear the mask.

Directed by:
Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey, Rodney Rothman
Screenplay by:
Phil Lord and Rodney Rothman
Story by:
Phil Lord
Based on:
The Marvel Comics
Produced by:
Avi Arad, Amy Pascal, Phil Lord, Christopher Miller, Christina Steinberg

MARVEL and all related character names: © & ™ 2019 MARVEL. Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, the Movie ©2018 SPAI. All Rights Reserved.


Spyro Reignited Trilogy: PS4 Review

Spyro Reignited Trilogy: PS4 Review


Released by Activision
Platform: PS4

Spyro Reignited Trilogy: PS4 ReviewEverything old is new again.

What with the
release of the PlayStation Classic console, Crash Bandicoot, remasters of the likes of Tetris and WipeOut, PlayStation's gone back to the late 90s in a wave of nostalgia.

Unsurprisingly joining this party is Toys For Bob's rehash of the three Spyro The Dragon games.

For those unfamiliar with the purple dragon, The Reignited Trilogy brings together Spyro the Dragon, Spyro 2: Ripto's Rage! and Spyro: Year of the Dragon; all of which were originally developed by Insomniac Games, with music from The Police drummer Stewart Copeland.

And it's pertinent to note that your nostalgia's not been messed with either, with level layouts and item locations the same as they were in the first games some two decades ago.

But what Toys for Bob has done is given the whole thing a spit and polish.
Spyro Reignited Trilogy: PS4 Review

Spyro feels more formed and kind of cutesy than he did originally, his purple skin given a fleshy feel and a lick of paint which is both fluid and eye-catching. The camera motion issues which irritated in the originals still lingers though, making portions of the jumping and reaching higher up difficult to negotiate.

At its heart, this is a nostalgia raid on your heart - and in all honesty, the platforming is fairly simple with the cutesy edges you need to feel like you're pulling on an old jumper locked away in the back of the cupboard for years and only recently rediscovered.

If you're not a fan of the originals or have never even played them, there's still much to adore here. Simply put, The Spyro Reignited Trilogy is solely about platfom gaming, and given the simplicity with which it's executed here, it's endlessly playable whether you're new to it or not.
Spyro Reignited Trilogy: PS4 Review

A few minor niggles with the camera aside, Toys for Bob has turned The Spyro Reignited Trilogy into a nice cosy remaster - it shines when it should in its HD coat, and also reminds you of why the games from 20 years ago still work - they're about playability, not sophistication and show that inclusivity comes in all forms and doesn't need you to work at it to enjoy.

Win a Bumblebee prize pack

Win a Bumblebee prize pack


To celebrate the release of Bumblebee, in cinemas from December 12, you can win a prize pack.

Included in this pack is a double pass and also a keychain.

About Bumblebee

On the run in the year 1987, Bumblebee finds refuge in a junkyard in a small Californian beach town.
Charlie (Hailee Steinfeld), on the cusp of turning 18 and trying to find her place in the world, discovers Bumblebee, battle-scarred and broken.

When Charlie revives him, she quickly learns this is no ordinary, yellow VW bug.

BUMBLEBEE is produced by “TRANSFORMERS” franchise veterans Lorenzo di Bonaventura and Michael Bay, along with executive producers Steven Spielberg, Brian Goldner and Mark Vahradian. Chris Brigham (“ARGO,” “INCEPTION”) will also executive produce.

The screenplay is written by Christina Hodson (“UNFORGETTABLE”).

Directed by Travis Knight (“KUBO AND THE TWO STRINGS,” “CORALINE”), the film stars Hailee Steinfeld, Pamela Adlon, John Cena, Stephen Schneider, and Jorge Lendeborg Jr.

Tuesday, 4 December 2018

New Captain Marvel trailer

New Captain Marvel trailer


A New Captain Marvel trailer has arrived.


In the trailer, which features an old lady who can also kick butt, Larson’s Captain Marvel begins to question her history after she start remembering her previous life on Earth — before she became part-Kree and a superhero. The trailer also features Samuel L. Jackson, looking much younger, and gives audiences a look at Jude Law as Mar-Vell.

Larson is starring opposite Jackson, Law, Ben Mendelsohn, Lee Pace, Lashana Lynch, Gemma Chan, Annette Bening and Clark Gregg.


“Captain Marvel” is directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck from a script by “Inside Out” scribe Meg LeFauve and Nicole Perlman. The project is based on the Marvel character Carol Danvers, an Air Force pilot whose DNA is fused with that of an alien during an accident. She becomes Captain Marvel after she gains the superpowers of strength, energy projection and flight. “Captain Marvel” is set in 1995.

Larson was announced as the character during San Diego Comic-Con in 2016. Details of the plot have been kept under wraps. Disney plans to release the movie on March 8, 2019.

“Captain Marvel” will be 21st film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU).

Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle: Film Review

Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle: Film Review


Vocal cast: Rohan Chand, Christian Bale, Andy Serkis, Benedict Cumberbatch, Cate Blanchett, Tom Hollander
Director: Andy Serkis

The latest take on the Kipling story takes a decidedly mixed tone as it moves from being a cinema release to getting its premiere on Netflix.

Director Andy Serkis and a CGI Family of animals re-tell the Jungle Book with a darker edge in this re-imagining of the tale of the man-cub Mowgli.

With an all-star cast taking on the voice duties, Serkis' tale mixes in both a stance on the environmental damage made by human intervention and a story of a coming-of-age of the man-cub Mowgli (played with reasonable aplomb by Chand).
Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle: Film Review

When Mowgli's brought into the tribe after Benedict Cumberbatch's sneering Shere Khan kills his family, it creates divisions for Peter Mullan's Akeela and crew, who veer between embracing him as their own while being fearful of how he may divide their world.

But when humans edge closer into the jungle, and Khan kills some of their own, battle lines are drawn, as inexorable schisms open.

There are moments early on when some of the CGI creaks and looks a bit off in Mowgli; combined with the slight human face look to the animals, the whole thing looks a little like Babe takes on the jungle, obviously mirroring the classic Disney looks but sitting at odds with the darker edges presented within.

It's clearly a family film, but never quite settles on a tone, even as it dispatches messages of standing up to bullies and its comedy cockney tones delivered by Serkis as Baloo.
Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle: Film Review

And yet, this coming of age tale, with some contemporary darker themes and edges, and with some hints of environmentalism, works in the back third after initially skewing younger.

At times, it almost seems afraid to embrace some of the darker edges, and not fully embrace the spirituality within. There are wonderful scenes when Mowgli is taught about fixing a kill dead on its eyes to accompany the soul when it departs, which hint at a depth and emotional edge that feels under-explored.

But while the final third exposes the darkness, it feels slightly bereft of the weight needed to get it over the line, and remarkably it also feels hurried in its conclusion.

Ultimately, Mowgli is a film that knows what it wants to do in terms of re-telling the tale. It doesn't always quite hit those highs that it's aiming for, but it's a fascinating attempt at re-pitching The Jungle Book - which could have been a touch more successful had the tone been set on earlier on, and the course remained true.

PlayStation Classic Review

PlayStation Classic Review


PlayStation Classic: Console Review

Released by Sony
Platform: PlayStation One

It's nigh on twenty years that PlayStation's been a part of our gaming lives.

So it is that as the talk of the PlayStation 5 grows ever louder, Sony have decided to unleash a small console rather than going big (for now).

The first thing you notice about The PlayStation Classic is how light the actual console is. At just 170g (with a controller weighing 140g), the thing feels lighter and more portable than a phone, and perhaps, were it not for the fact you'd need the bulkier controller and the HDMI cable, you could cart it around to your mates for some fun and games.
PlayStation Classic Review

Well, I say fun, but the reality of the PlayStation Classic is no matter which way you cut it, the game choices are puzzling at best, disappointing in some ways at worst. Rights issues or licences, whatever it is, gamers won't care too much about that - they'll simply want the genre-defining nostalgia fix they got when they were young and more easily pleased with the likes of pixel heavy Tomb Raider, speedy WipeOut and the harshness of Crash Bandicoot.

Connecting up the handsize console is easy as; its primary puzzle is why it doesn't come with a plug though, with the console needing you to use a phone charger to power it up via a USB. HDMI goes into the back of your viewing port, and the old school controller connects in the usual manner at the front. So far, so satisfactory.

Firing up the console, it's easy to get a goosebumps moment as you remember the simplicity of the execution and the sounds. And from there, it's into a carousel of the 20 titles for the 20 years PlayStation has been going.

It's fair to say they are a mixed bag - and will be a disappointment, as mentioned, to those who'd be looking at the system to provide the likes of Crash, Spyro and even WipeOut - all of these titles have recently had remasters, but if you're releasing a retro system aimed at provoking nostalgia, you can't really overlook the titles which defined a console.

Some of it makes up for the loss - there's the original Grand Theft Auto, with its pixelated violence still in tact,  there's Final Fantasy VII, Ridge Racer Type 4, Resident Evil and the ever-wonderful Abe's Oddyssee.

Like any decent emulator, the PlayStation Classic makes some of them look good, and some of them look bad - playing Cool Boarders 2, the game still goes blocky and suffers from bad controls as it did on release; and frankly, it's not the case that it would be wanted any other way.

Navigation is simple enough, but you need to press the reset button every time you want to go back to the menu - not exactly a massive burden, but really a sign that Sony was so headstrong in keeping this console as it was that it's almost stubborn in its execution of it. But it's such a little thing of beauty in terms of its physical representation, that it's almost hard to stay mad at the choices the designers have made for it - and one suspects, licences would have been the biggest hurdle to getting some of the games you'd want for it.

All in all, as a blast of nostalgia, the PlayStation Classic does what it says on the box, but ever so slightly fumbles the Classic part when it comes to the games.

It's a beautifully executed piece of design that's hand-sized and has as much heart as the brand does.

And while the lack of a plug is puzzling, the fact there are two controllers means it's immediately set up for play and go is great for socialising with some mates.

There's just an irony that for a games console,  some of the game choices that shaped a generation aren't present in the PlayStation's wonderfully detailed mini nostalgia burst.

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