Saturday, May 26, 2007

Its RUSH HOUR in AUGUST

Chris Tucker returns to the big screen after a six-year absence as he reunites with the all-star team of co-star Jackie Chan, director Brett Ratner (Rush Hour, Rush Hour 2, X-Men: The Last Stand, Hannibal), and writer Jeff Nathanson (Rush Hour 2, Catch Me If You Can) to deliver the third installment of the blockbuster Rush Hour franchise. Arriving in theaters on August 10, 2007, Rush Hour 3 sees the beloved action comedy duo of Tucker and Chan reprising their roles as LAPD Detective James Carter and Chinese Chief Inspector Lee respectively. This time around, the two must travel to Paris to battle a wing of the Chinese organized crime family, the Triads. Rush Hour 3 is being produced by Ratner, Jay Stern, and Arthur Sarkissian and executive produced by Roger Birnbaum (Memoirs of a Geisha) and Jon Glickman (The Pacifier).



Resident Evil Extinction sep21


Resident Evil: Extinction is again based on the wildly popular video game series and picks up where the last film left off. Alice (Milla Jovovich), now in hiding in the Nevada desert, once again joins forces with Carlos Olivera (Oded Fehr) and L.J. (Mike Epps), along with new survivors Claire (Ali Larter), K-Mart (Spencer Locke ) and Nurse Betty (Ashanti) to try to eliminate the deadly virus that threatens to make every human being undead…and to seek justice. Since being captured by the Umbrella Corporation, Alice has been subjected to biogenic experimentation and becomes genetically altered, with super-human strengths, senses and dexterity. These skills, and more, will be needed if anyone is to remain alive.

PIRATE Being REVIEWED


Having been largely ambivalent toward the first two Pirates of the Caribbean films, I had few specific expectations going into At World's End -- the series' finale. That's not to say I had low expectations, mind you; Curse of the Black Pearl and Dead Man's Chest were passingly entertaining and professionally executed, if nothing else. But even with Johnny Depp back at the helm and director Gore Verbinski guiding the voyage so to speak, doubt remained as to whether the series could eventually join the ranks of classic franchises. Sure, as a bullet point in pop culture, its position is assured. But as an integral part of movie history -- Depp's iconic turn as Sparrow notwithstanding -- the only legacy that Pirates seems poised to leave is the distinction of it being the first major series about seafaring swashbucklers to succeed financially.
And while Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End does indeed satisfactorily tie up all of the loose ends introduced in the other two installments, a fitting finale for what has become one of the most successful trilogies in recent history, there is little in its labyrinthine plotlines and countless character developments to earn it the timeless appeal that has secured the likes of Star Wars or Lord of the Rings their classic status in the annals of cinema.
Part of the reason for this is the fact that At World's End feels in a lot of ways like a pastiche of other sequels. At the end of Dead Man's Chest, Depp's Jack Sparrow succumbed to an untimely demise at the hands of the Kraken -- a setback a la Han Solo's carbon storage at the end of The Empire Strikes Back. Enlisting the help of a resurrected Captain Barbossa (Geoffrey Rush), Will Turner (Orlando Bloom) and Elizabeth Swann (Keira Knightley) contact Chinese pirate Sao Feng (Chow Yun-Fat) to help them retrieve Sparrow from Davy Jones' Locker for an overdue meeting with the legendary Lords of the Brethren Court. (Imagine the Tatooine sequence from Return of the Jedi with Knightley in the slave bikini instead of Carrie Fisher and you have the right idea.)

- Walt Disney PicturesBefore a deal can be struck, soldiers working for the East India Company attack Sao Feng's stronghold, effectively announcing the intended reign of the ruthless Lord Cutler Beckett (Tom Hollander) over the seven seas. As Will and Elizabeth soon discover, Beckett also controls Davy Jones (Bill Nighy) and the Flying Dutchman, and intends to use the ghost ship as a not-so-secret weapon to destroy all those who oppose his rule. With Beckett, Davy Jones and the Dutchman in hot pursuit, Will, Elizabeth and Barbossa strike out to rescue Sparrow from limbo, reunite the Brethren Court, and hopefully preserve the anarchic rule of piracy over the seas for years to come. (Insert Lord of the Rings-esque terrain-crossing montages and Matrix: Revolutions-style visual flourishes here.)
Much mention has already been made about this film's complicated and occasionally confusing storylines. Everything fits neatly together by the end of At World's End, much less the franchise as a whole; it's really more a matter of understanding exactly what's happening in the moment versus what it means later. As Verbinski acknowledges, many of the sequences -- the big set pieces that cost the most money -- were scheduled without being scripted, and as a result the movie does sometimes feel like a chess match between grand masters staged for an audience of checkers experts. But even dispassionately immersing oneself in the script's combination of Greek mythology, pirate lore and screenwriter's contrivance, there ultimately is very little that is too complex or unpredictable to throw off most viewers.
Unlike Dead Man's Chest, which felt overstuffed with Kraken encounters and at least one sequence that was completely unnecessary (cannibals, I'm looking in your direction), the scenes in At World's End all seem to have a purpose, or at the very least relate to the overall story. And while fans and critics turn the majority of their attention to Depp's captivating scenery-chewing as Sparrow, most of the real credit for the series' success must go to Verbinski. Particularly during the rain-and-windswept finale, where ships are colliding, swords are clashing, and more swashes are buckled than one can count, he manages to keep all of the various stories straight, much less the languages of emotion and action clear.
- Walt Disney PicturesAfter completing three of these movies, The Weather Man, The Ring and The Mexican, Verbinski is fast establishing himself as a top-tier studio helmer. As much because of his versatility as his lack of clear directorial identity, the filmmaker seems well-suited to inherit future (or present) franchises because he can keep tight reins on each series' individual landscape without redressing it too dramatically; in other words, he is an expert at rendering summer movie spectacle in film language that even the slowest audiences can understand. (Plus, he puts a monkey in pants and a hat, which is always worth at least a half of a star.)
Overall, however, At World's End does not surpass the previous two Pirates movies, even if it does answer virtually every question brought up in all three films and satisfy the demands of its position as "trilogy closer." Moreover, it certainly does not elevate the franchise to cinematic "mythology." Though the film and the series as a whole is full of iconic moments and exciting set pieces, there is little here that will languish in moviegoers' memories for decades to come -- except, again, as a temporary standard-bearer for blockbuster action, or perhaps a reminder of some other legitimately timeless movie franchise.
Ultimately, it's beautifully acted, expertly directed, and all-around well-mounted, as a sequel, franchise finale, or even general summer tent pole flick. But don't expect it to redefine your hierarchy of all-time favorite film series or provide a new reservoir of movie quotes for water-cooler conversations. Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End is the third installment in a series of films that inspire temporary entertainment and enjoyment but leave little if no lasting impression. And it absolutely sustains that legacy, even if it doesn't live up to any others.

Friday, May 18, 2007

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Ratatouille ("Rat-a-too-ee")


The movie Ratatouille tells the success story of an unlikely hero; a rat named Rémy who finds himself in a Parisian restaurant made famous by an eccentric French chef, Auguste Gusteau. Rémy is not only a gourmet (so quite an outsider among his kinfolk), but aims to become a fine chef. This far-reaching ambition, incredibly enough, he achieves.

See the video below to know more about the movie
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Get Pirated

In the follow-up to the record-breaking smash 2006 hit PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST, we find our heroes Will Turner (ORLANDO BLOOM) and Elizabeth Swann (KEIRA KNIGHTLEY) allied with Captain Barbossa (GEOFFREY RUSH) in a desperate quest to free Captain Jack Sparrow (JOHNNY DEPP) from his mind-bending trap in Davy Jones’ locker—while the terrifying ghost ship, The Flying Dutchman, and Davy Jones, under the control of the East India Trading Company, wreaks havoc across the Seven Seas. Navigating through treachery, betrayal and wild waters, they must forge their way to exotic Singapore and confront the cunning Chinese pirate Sao Feng (CHOW YUN-FAT). Now headed beyond the very ends of the Earth, each must ultimately choose a side in a final, titanic battle— as not only their lives and fortunes but the entire future of the freedom-loving Pirate way hangs in the balance. Produced by Jerry Bruckheimer and directed by Gore Verbinski from a screenplay written by Ted Elliott & Terry Rossio, our beloved cast sets sail once again on a fresh, new adventure in May 25th 2007



Monday, May 14, 2007

Get Transformed on July 4th



Watch The Trailer Transformers



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Saturday, May 12, 2007

Shrek-3



Shrek 3 trailer Watch


This is goin to be a trilogy by dream works

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Watch Spidey-3 online



CD1: spidey3_1
CD2: spidey3_2


Guys pls post ur comments did u like this post or not

Friday, May 4, 2007

Robinsons meet with a rating of B


When Lewis meets a mysterious boy from the future named Wilbur Robinson, the two travel forward in time where Lewis discovers the amazing secret of the Robinson family. Lewis is a brilliant twelve-year-old with a surprising number of clever inventions to his credit. His latest and most ambitious project is the Memory Scanner, which he hopes will retrieve early memories of his mother and maybe even reveal why she put him up for adoption. But before he can get his answer, his invention is stolen by the dastardly Bowler Hat Guy and his diabolical hat - and constant companion - Doris. Lewis has all but given up hope in his future when a mysterious boy named Wilbur Robinson whisks our bewildered hero away in a time machine and the two travel forward in time to spend a day with Wilbur's eccentric family. In a world filled with flying cars and floating cities, they hunt down Bowler Hat Guy, save the future and uncover the amazing secret of Lewis' future family.

Next Falls to 3rd Position


Las Vegas showroom magician Cris Johnson has a secret which is a gift and a curse which torments him: he can see a few minutes into the future. Sick of the examinations he underwent as a child and the interest of the government and medical establishment in his power, he lies low under an assumed name in Vegas, performing cheap tricks and living off small-time gambling "winnings." But when a terrorist group threatens to detonate a nuclear device in Los Angeles, government agent Callie Ferris must use all her wiles to capture Cris and convince him to help her stop the cataclysm.

Disturbia Rocks the charts


After his father's death, Kale becomes sullen, withdrawn, and troubled -- so much so that he finds himself under a court-ordered sentence of house arrest. His mother, Julie, works night and day to support herself and her son, only to be met with indifference and lethargy. The walls of his house begin to close in on Kale. He becomes a voyeur as his interests turn outside the windows of his suburban home towards those of his neighbors, one of which Kale begins to suspect is a serial killer. But, are his suspicions merely the product of cabin fever and his overactive imagination?

Away From Her


Grant and Fiona have been married for decades. They have been through rough patches, but their lives are inextricably connected and their relationship seems idyllic: they share a private language and obvious affection for one another. Now retired, they live comfortably in a house in the country, but their contentment is permanently disrupted when Fiona's memory starts to deteriorate. Determined not to saddle Grant with her declining health, she insists upon going to a rest home which only tears Grant apart. He feels guilty about decades-old behavior, and his state is worsened by the rules of Fiona's new residence, which demand that he not communicate or visit with her for a lengthy period of time.

Spidey


Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) has finally managed to strike a balance between his devotion to M.J. (Kirstin Dunst) and his duties as a superhero. But there's a storm brewing on the horizon. When his suit suddenly changes, turning jet-black and enhancing his powers, it transforms Peter as well, bringing out the dark, vengeful side of his personality that he struggles to control. Under the influence of the suit, Peter becomes overconfident and starts to neglect the people who care about him most. Forced to choose between the seductive power of the new suit and the compassionate hero he used to be, Peter must overcome his personal demons as two of the most-feared villains yet, Sandman (Thomas Haden Church's Flint Marko) and Venom (the transformed version of Topher Grace's Eddie Brock), gather unparalleled power and a thirst for retribution to threaten Peter and everyone he loves.

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Hi All

THIS A BLOG WHICH IS GOIN TO BE STARTED FOR ALL HOLLYWOOD MOVIE FANS

THANKIN YOU

CINEFOX