Posted Jul 2nd 2008 8:34PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Warner Brothers, Family Films, Harry Potter, Remakes and Sequels

I didn't get beyond the fifth Harry Potter novel, so I'm not familiar with what goes on in
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. I never would have thought, however, that it features an adorable version of Voldemort (which
reminded our own Kim Voynar of the young Anakin of
The Phantom Menace), nor would I have ever imagined, in my wildest years, that it is anything like
Trainspotting. Yet that's what Daniel "Harry Potter" Radcliffe told
Empire regarding
the upcoming movie adaptation. He specifically likened
Half-Blood Prince to the heroin-heavy movie, admitting that it is indeed strange to mention those two films in the same sentence. He also stated that in his movie, "there's a fair amount of sexual energy and drug parallels."
Now, of course, that doesn't mean there's actual sex and drugs featured in the movie. And this wouldn't be the first time the
Harry Potter films included suggestive imagery or content. One of the early installments (I think it was the original,
Sorcerer's Stone) features a scene in which Harry experiments with his wand under the covers late at night. Like with a similar scene from
Spider-Man, in which Peter Parker wakes up in his own sticky web, it's pretty obvious what real-world experience the scene is meant to parallel. So, I'm not surprised that as the
Harry Potter movies get darker and the cast grows up that we'll be seeing other kinds of innuendo. And knowing the franchise so far, even if the suggestive imagery or content is easily deciphered, there's sure to be good messages tied in. It's not like Warner Bros. would permit improper subliminal encouragements.
Posted Jul 2nd 2008 4:02PM by Matt Bradshaw
Filed under: Action, Comedy, Box Office, Family Films, Comic/Superhero/Geek, Box Office Predictions
It was a good weekend at the box office for both of last week's newbies, marking the first time in history that two films opening on the same weekend pulled in over $50 million each. Here's the top five:
1. Wall-E: $63 million
2. Wanted: $50.9 million
3. Get Smart: $20.2 million
4. Kung Fu Panda: $11.7 million
5. The Incredible Hulk: $9.6 million Only one major release this week, but we've also got one going into wider release.
Hancock
What's It All About: Will Smith plays Hancock, a hard drinking anti-social superhero, and a PR agent played by
Jason Bateman sets out to repair Hancock's public image.
Why It Might Do Well: Will Smith may not always have the Midas touch (
I Am Legend left me cold) but he's got quite a few successful blockbusters under his belt, and people are loving the superhero flicks these days. I've liked Bateman's work a lot since
Arrested Development, and I'm always glad to see him. Also, Cinematical's own Kim Voynar has given the film
her seal of approval.
Why It Might Not Do Well: Unlike most big-budget superhero movies, this one doesn't originate from another media like comic books, so it doesn't come with the core fanbase of an
Iron Man or an
Incredible Hulk. Also, the 36% fresh rating at
Rottentomatoes.com is not encouraging.
Number of Theaters: 3,900
Prediction: $45 million
And going into wider release this week...
Continue reading Box Office: Hancock Arrives
Posted Jul 2nd 2008 1:02PM by Kim Voynar
Filed under: New Releases, New Line, Theatrical Reviews, New in Theaters, Family Films, Picturehouse

If you have a girl between the ages of 4 and 12 in your life, chances are pretty good you've heard of American Girl. The wildly successful franchise has spawned a whole series of high-end dolls, doll clothes, doll furniture and accessories, books, cookbooks ... and, of course, movies. American Girls are enormously popular with both girls and parents seeking a wholesome alternative to the freakishly-thin Barbie doll image or the hooker-in-training look of those wretched Bratz dolls. As an added bonus, they encourage girls to learn a little history, without even realizing it .
The whole thing with American Girl is that each of the dolls comes from a different time period: there's Kristen, an immigrant girl from Sweden; Felicity, an American Revolution girl whose father is a Patriot, while her best friend's father is a Loyalist; Samantha, being raised by her wealthy grandmother in the 1920s, when women's suffrage and class difference were big issues; Molly, a girl whose father, a doctor, is off serving in the Second World War; Addy, who escapes slavery with her mother to search for her father and brother, and so on. Each doll has her own set of books: there's the intro book, the birthday book, the book where so-and-so learns a lesson, the Christmas book, and even a line of mystery books.
Continue reading Review: Kit Kittredge: An American Girl
Posted Jul 1st 2008 3:02PM by Peter Martin
Filed under: Documentary, Drama, Foreign Language, IFC, ThinkFilm, Box Office, Family Films, Cinematical Indie, Samuel Goldwyn Films, Picturehouse

Despite dropping more than 50% in its second week of release,
Kit Kittredge: An American Girl (Picturehouse) outdrew all other specialty releases over the weekend, earning $21,200 per screen at five theaters, according to estimates compiled by
Box Office Mojo.
Directed by Canadian indie veteran Patricia Rozema (
I've Heard the Mermaids Singing,
When Night is Falling),
Kit Kittredge has clearly benefited from a devoted fan base that convinced thousands of their parental units to fork over $20 per ticket -- which, to be fair, includes a limited-edition t-shirt -- to see the movie in advance of its wide release tomorrow. That's a very good performance when you consider its main competition was not, actually, a French-language flick that skewed very adult, but actually a heavily-advertised animated film.
Catherine Breillat's
The Last Mistress (IFC Films), starring
Asia Argento, took in $17,600 per screen at two locations, which probably owes as much, if not more, to the name recognition of Argento as that of the often-confounding Breillat.
Continue reading Indie Weekend Box Office: American Girl 'Kit' vs. French 'Mistress'
Posted Jul 1st 2008 11:32AM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Comedy, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Casting, 20th Century Fox, Family Films, Remakes and Sequels

If the sequel to
Night at the Museum wanted to retain the level of accuracy seen with the original, it would have a Chinese actor playing Russian Czar Ivan IV (aka Ivan the Terrible). But while I'm sure there will still be historical errors abound in
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian, the honor of playing Ivan has gone instead to pale-enough actor/filmmaker
Christopher Guest (
Best in Show),
according to the Hollywood Reporter. And since Guest is actually a far more serious man than you'd expect, despite all those silly mockumentaries he writes and directs, here's hoping he studies
his Eisenstein for inspiration.
A bunch of other actors have also joined
Ben Stiller in the fantasy film, including
Jon Bernthal (
World Trade Center) as Al Capone,
Bill Hader (
Superbad) as General Custer,
Alain Chabat (
The Science of Sleep) as Napoleon and the franchise's screenwriters,
Robert Ben Garant and
Thomas Lennon, as the Wright brothers. This makes for a very packed cast, considering most of the first movie's co-stars
are apparently returning, including
Robin Williams,
Steve Coogan,
Owen Wilson,
Ricky Gervais,
Dick Van Dyke,
Jake Cherry and
Patrick Gallagher, the guy who looked all wrong for the part of Atilla the Hun. Other newbies to the series include
Amy Adams as Amelia Earhart and
Hank Azaria as Egyptian pharaoh Kah Mun Rah.
The sequel is currently filming in Vancouver, which seems a bit far away from the actual Smithsonian Institute, but reportedly the production will have access to shoot a few scenes in the actual museum, which is located in Washington, D.C. Maybe it will actually look like it takes place there, too.
Posted Jun 29th 2008 5:02PM by Erik Davis
Filed under: Action, Animation, Drama, New Releases, Fandom, Family Films, Comic/Superhero/Geek

The numbers are in, and both
Wall·E ($62.5 million) and
Wanted ($51.1 million) absolutely rocked the box office this weekend. We'll save the full report for tomorrow morning, but we here at
Cinematical wanted to know what you thought of each film. A
Cinematical poll last week -- asking which movie you planned on seeing over the weekend -- showed that 40% of you were interested in watching both flicks. Since these are two completely different movies, we're not asking which one you liked better (though feel free to offer up that info). Instead, what did you think of each?
How doe
s Wall·E stack up against the previous Pixar efforts? Was it better than
Toy Story or
The Incredibles? (Speaking of, don't forget to vote in our
Best Pixar film poll, which currently has
The Incredibles kicking total ass.) What about
Wanted? Did it rock your socks? Or did style get in the way of substance? Sound off below ...
Posted Jun 28th 2008 1:32PM by William Goss
Filed under: Animation, Universal, Family Films, Trailers and Clips
Disney has Pixar. Fox has Blue Sky. Paramount has, for now, Dreamworks. As seemingly the last studio to get into animated features, Universal has offered up the trailer for their maiden effort, The Tale of Despereaux, over at Yahoo! Movies.
Based upon the 2003 Newbury Award-winning novel by Kate DiCamillo, the film follows the adventurous antics of Despereaux (voiced by Matthew Broderick), a mouse with large ears and - I'm just guessing here - an even bigger heart, as he bucks the status quo of cowardice that seems to have imprisoned his kind to a fearsome existence.
Besides being an animated tale of a brave rodent with a tongue-tricky title and thus fated to merit comparison to those which have recently set lofty standards for similar fare, this project genuinely looks and sounds pleasant enough for all its yay-for-being-yourself familiarity. Besides, there's only more hope to be had when we're looking at a voice cast that includes the likes of Broderick, Kevin Kline, Dustin Hoffman, Sigourney Weaver, Stanley Tucci, William H. Macy, and Tony Hale, not to mention a Harry Potter veteran or two.
With its eye on the year-end holiday season, The Tale of Despereaux is scheduled to hit theaters on December 19th.
Posted Jun 27th 2008 11:02AM by Elisabeth Rappe
Filed under: Animation, Comedy, Disney, Celebrities and Controversy, Family Films, Movie Marketing, Trailers and Clips
Empire has the exclusive premiere of the U.S. trailer for Disney's newest animated (and 3-D!) feature,
Bolt. You'll have to click over there to see it, but remember to hurry back and tell us what you thought.
Bolt is the story of a four-legged television star who believes his daring escapades are real. But when he finds himself lost in New York City, he has to recognize his ordinariness and find his way home. According to the magazine, early footage is reminiscent of
Toy Story, which intrigues me more than the trailer actually does. Don't get me wrong, it's a cute trailer, but it has that standard Disney feel with the sarcastic sidekicks and obvious jokes. But I do love that hamster -- he sells me on it! He's adorable, and brings back happy memories of my childhood hamsters who also used their rollerballs for violent stunts.
Continue reading The Trailer for Disney's 'Bolt' Races Online
Posted Jun 27th 2008 8:52AM by James Rocchi
Filed under: Animation, Disney, Theatrical Reviews, Family Films

" ... and some Hunter may express
Wonder like ours, when thro' the wilderness
Where London stood, holding the Wolf in chace,
He meets some fragments huge, and stops to guess
What powerful but unrecorded race
Once dwelt in that annihilated place."
-- Horace Smith,
OzymandiasWALL-E, from Pixar studios, shows us a ruined city, centuries from now, where a single (and singular) robot toils to cube trash and, it seems, will never lack for work. WALL-E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter (Earth-Class)), a two-treaded solitary worker robot, spends his days cubing trash and his nights shut in safe from the cataclysmic garbage-gales that sweep the planet, inside a repair truck he's filled with things that have fascinated him; garden gnomes, butane lighters, a copy of
Hello, Dolly! And in
WALL-E's nearly-silent opening minutes, we get a sense of the world he lives in. Everything is ruined; there are no signs of life but for cockroaches; the only voices you hear come when the motion-activated Buy 'n' Large holo-billboards go off. WALL-E strips his broken-down brethren for parts and recharges by the sun's rays and stacks trash-cubes to imitate the skyscrapers decaying all around him, garbage as a pale reflection of glory.
Continue reading Review: WALL-E -- James's Take
Posted Jun 26th 2008 12:02PM by Erik Davis
Filed under: Action, Animation, New Releases, Fandom, Family Films, Polls

Unlike last week's double dose of the funny, this weekend we're dealing with two completely different flicks. One is a light, breezy, beautiful Pixar animated effort, while the other is a wham-bam-boom, guns drawn, bullets flying, sexy, adrenaline-fueled action pic. Good news is the buzz on both films is pretty damn good. Personally, I've only seen
WALL·E, and it's definitely one of my favorite films of the year so far. But you have to be the sorta person who digs Pixar. I know grown adults who can't stand watching animated feature films. That might be you. I happen to really enjoy them, as does my wife, and so we had a blast with it. Read
my review. Maybe it'll help sway your decision.
On the other hand,
Wanted looks to be the flick for those in need of a big-screen rush. It comes highly-stylized and proud to be rated R. Did we mention that
Angelina Jolie still looks sexy as all hell?
In his review from the Los Angeles Film Festival, James said, "
Wanted's a corporate product, but, thankfully, it's an excellent one -- the two-fisted, double-barreled high-octane guilty pleasure summer action movie you've been waiting for." Couldn't have summed it up better myself. But which one are you seeing? Both? Neither? Something else entirely? Sound off below ...
Posted Jun 25th 2008 10:02PM by Erik Davis
Filed under: Animation, New Releases, Disney, Theatrical Reviews, New in Theaters, Family Films
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It's hundreds of years from now, practically no life (save for a cockroach) remains on the giant garbage dump that's become Earth, and, funnily enough, the only remaining sign of humanity can be found inside the planet's last functional robot: a trash collector (and compactor) named WALL·E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class). It's been roughly 700 years since humans last populated Earth, and in that time WALL·E has wasted away doing what he was originally programmed for: collect, compact and pile trash so that it's out of the way.
However, over the years WALL·E has managed to develop a bit of OCD, collecting certain items and methodically storing them in the large metal container he calls home. One day, while out searching for more trash (and knickknacks), a spaceship arrives to drop off another robot -- one whose mission it is to scour the area and search for life. And it's a girl ... named EVE (Extra-terrestrial Vegetation Evaluator).
Thus begins what is perhaps Pixar's most romantic film yet -- a beautiful sci-fi tale complete with all the feel-good vibes and fantastic, cutting-edge visuals we've come to expect from a film wearing the Pixar name. Despite a few small bumps in the galaxy, WALL·E can easily claim a spot up top on a list featuring the best films of the year so far, and it will surely go down as one of Pixar's most memorable -- because it's also one of their most personal.
Continue reading Review: WALL·E
Posted Jun 25th 2008 9:32AM by Elisabeth Rappe
Filed under: Action, Deals, Mystery & Suspense, Paramount, Family Films, Newsstand, Dreamworks, Steven Spielberg, Games and Game Movies

I've come to the conclusion that Steven Spielberg must not need any sleep. Because
Variety is reporting that he's just added another project to his busy plate:
39 Clues, a multiplatform adventure series that will launch September 9th and run for two years. It spans a series of ten books, collectible cards, and an online game. The game will actually be designed around a contest, where young participants will try to solve the mystery scattered throughout the books, with a chance to win $10,000. Whew! Just typing all that makes
me tired, I can't imagine sorting through it to make a movie.
39 Clues does have a neat, Indiana Jones feel to its storyline -- it centers on the most powerful family in the world, the Cahills, who boast Houdini and Napoleon among their relatives. The adventure kicks off in the first book,
Maze of Bones, when the death of the Cahill's matriarch, Grace, sparks off a race for the inheritance. She hasn't made it easy, you see: Her last will offers her descendants the choice between $1 million, or a clue. Scattered around the world and throughout history, the clues will reveal the source of the family's secret powers. Spielberg is contemplating taking the director's chair, and aims to have a screenwriter attached in the next few weeks. And the first book hasn't even hit Barnes and Noble yet!
Continue reading Steven Spielberg Finds '39 Clues'
Posted Jun 24th 2008 9:02PM by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Animation, Casting, Family Films

While she made a name for herself with her stint as Wednesday Addams,
Christina Ricci has always dipped into brighter and colorful fare here and there. Before the goth, she was Kate in
Mermaids, and after, she wiggled her colorful toe socks in
The Ice Storm, performed that sexy, bowling alley dance in pale blue for
Buffalo '66, and even went a shade of
Pumpkin. But with the recent
Speed Racer, she took it to another level: super, ultra-vibrant, unrealistic color.
But that's nothing compared to her next gig, which doesn't have her changing race like Robert Downey Jr., but has her going yellow. Crayon yellow. Luckily, it's not live-action.
The Hollywood Reporter posts that she is going to voice the lead in a new animated CG feature called
The Hero of Color City. She'll play a timid crayon called Yellow, who is one of many crayons threatened when "an evil tyrant" appears to remove color from their world. Could a timid, yellow gal be the hero? The picture was penned by J.P. McCormick, Rich Raczelowski, and Evan Spiliotopoulos, and will be directed by Becky Bristow.
There is already talk of "merchandise, art supplies, and educational products," so expect a big wave of crayon-centric marketing and coloring books coming our way. At least this marketing kick will inspire tykes to create things.
Posted Jun 23rd 2008 8:32PM by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Deals, Scripts, Family Films

And I thought living out
Freaky Friday or
Honey, I Shrunk the Kids would suck.
In a move reminiscent of the
Angel episode "Story Time,"
The Hollywood Reporter posts that Disney has picked up a pitch from
Patrick Doody and
Chris Valenziano called
Happy Little Family. But instead of all those human parts morphing into a small, felty puppet, they're becoming dollish.
The film will focus on an entire family who somehow get turned into a "popular set of dolls" after a wish goes nuts. (Once again with the Whedon references, you'd think people would've learned the harm of wishing by now...) So, the family are now dolls, and they have to "work together to survive the dangers they encounter in their newfound state" while trying to figure out how to re-humanize themselves.
Is there an evil spell on them? Do they just have to learn how to work together as a family to survive? Since this is Disney we're talking about, I'll assume the latter.
Posted Jun 23rd 2008 8:32AM by Peter Martin
Filed under: Action, Comedy, Drama, Foreign Language, IFC, Sony Classics, Box Office, Family Films, Cinematical Indie, War, Picturehouse

I noticed an unusual number of young girls clutching dolls at a multiplex on Saturday afternoon. This made me very nervous. I know it's summer and school's out, but the early Saturday crowd tends to be non-teenage people like me who try and catch up with the latest Hollywood releases without the distractions of the Friday/Saturday night teen crowd. What were all the young girls coming to see?
Kung Fu Panda?
Get Smart?
Sex and the City?
Nope, the hordes of girls were lining up politely to see the latest trendy indie release:
Kit Kittredge: An American Girl. One of the last three releases from distributor Picturehouse, which is due to shut down completely very soon,
Kit Kittredge may be based on a doll, yet has further indie cred thanks to
Little Miss Sunshine star
Abigail Breslin. And maybe all those little girls will grow up to write their own
Juno some day? In any case, the film opened in five theaters in five cities, two weeks in advance of a wide release, and grossed a super impressive $44,600 per screen, according to estimates compiled by
Box Office Mojo.
Picturehouse also scored with another one of their last-gasp releases, the Mongolian war-mongering
Mongol, which expanded to 94 screens and turned in a muscular performance of $7,914 per screen.
Continue reading Indie Weekend Box Office: American Girl 'Kit' Leads Them All
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