Deadline recently reported

Deadline recently reported



Watch Despicable 2 Me Online The video seen above features Battle Guy (Clark Duke) and Insect Man (Robert Emms) appealing to people whose parents were killed by muggers, and ex-cops who got tired of watching bad guys get away with their crimes. "Find your identity with us," is a pretty good sales pitch, and I'm looking around to see what I have that can be fashioned into a costume so I can go kick evil square in the balls, too.



Watch White House Down Online Executive produced by Elijah Wood, Toad Road was inspired by a small town local legend, and Banker’s approach to telling the tale is a pseudo-documentary style. It appears to start off in the same vein as the haunting Lake Mungo or Cropsey, but gets increasingly off-kilter as the film goes along, drifting into Black Witch territory, a comparison that is strengthened due to the completely improvisational work done by the cast of all newcomers. And I’m all for it, so long as the film continues to have fun even when the evil takes over, like V/H/S/2 did, in ways that its predecessor sadly didn’t.



Watch The Purge Online Now that I’ve spent ten minutes picturing Reynolds and Mendelsohn working together, I’ve grown a percentage point or two more interested. After all, I actually can’t wait to see Reynolds play opposite a grizzled Jeff Bridges in the comic adaptation R.I.P.D., because that’s precisely the over-the-top kind of film I don’t mind him in. (Just give us Deadpool already!) And his other upcoming projects sound pretty good as well, including Atom Egoyan’s kidnapping thriller Queen of the Night and Marjane Satrapi’s psychological thriller The Voices. He’s also attached to join director Tarsem Singh for a body-switching sci-fi thriller called Selfless, which should pair well with DreamWorks Animation’s Turbo, am I right?



Watch World War Z Online Production is set to begin on Mississippi Grind early next year. In the meantime, check out Reynolds holding his big gun in the R.I.P.D. trailer below. Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas has always been a fan favorite. Because of this, Disney has been really good about re-releasing the title, rather than keeping it in the vault half the time. Though buyers can find other DVD and Blu-ray copies on the market, Walt Disney Home Entertainment will be releasing The Nightmare Before Christmas on to Blu-ray 3D, Blu-ray and DVD for a special 20th Anniversary Edition on September 10.



Watch Man of Steel Online Honestly, the new cover art (below) isn’t enough to scare me away from the set, but it doesn’t really pull me in and scream “buy me,” either. If you don’t own a copy of this movie—which you should—the market is already pretty well saturated with copies in various forms, so here’s a little guide to what you can purchase, right now. Besides renting a copy of the film, there are two big editions currently on the marketplace, right now. There’s a 2010 Collectors Edition with a super fun cover, which can be purchased in a Blu-ray combo pack or a DVD copy. Then, there is an edition that Walt Disney Home Entertainment put out as part of its initial foray into 3D content for TV. Like that edition, the 20th Anniversary Edition will be available in all 3 hard copy formats.



Watch Fast and Furious 6 Online The real draw, then, will be whether or not the 20th Anniversary Edition will have enough bells and whistles to entice buyers. So far, Disney has only given us the packaging and the initial announcement, but since the earlier sets all offered plenty of bonus features, this one should, as well. The real question will be whether or not the set will offer fans anything they haven’t seen before.



Watch Star Trek into Darkness Online Even though I quite enjoyed Two Guys and Girl (a.k.a. Two Guys, A Girl And A Pizza Place), at some point I realized Ryan Reynolds has never been on my list of actors whose projects I’m actively interested in. It wasn’t Green Lantern, because I was already there by that point. I think It was when he signed on to star in Buried that I realized spending an entire movie with him sounded less than satisfactory. (Incidentally, it was a better flick than I thought it would be-- so my instincts aren't necessarily correct.) I’m not trying to rip the guy a new one here, because he’s a fine performer by all means. I’m just saying Mississippi Grind now sounds like a much different movie than the one I’d been envisioning.



Deadline recently reported Reynolds has joined Electric City’s Mississippi Grind, taking a role that Jake Gyllenhaal was in talks for last year. The film will be written and directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, who helmed Ryan Gosling’s Oscar-nominated performance in 2006’s Half Nelson. Could they bring Reynolds the same kind of acclaim? I mean, they scored a winning and non-stereotypical performance from Zach Galifianakis in 2010’s It’s Kind of a Funny Story. I can’t tell you exactly what the extras will be, but I can promise some awesome tunes from Danny Elfman and some inspired animation will be included. The Nightmare Before Christmas was initially released all the way back in 1993. The film follows Jack Skellington, the Halloween mastermind and Pumpkin King, who is bored with his role. After discovering Christmas, his ambition grows and he decides to embark on a new mission oriented around the holiday, to the horror of little boys and girls everywhere. The film was praised for its use of stop motion animation and its intricate scenescapes during its time, but Tim Burton’s film has also held up over the years. In fact, Disney showed so much faith in the flick that it was the first convert to 3D back in 2006. Amusingly, the Blu-ray 3D format craze has died down since then, but if you do have the technology in your living room, you can catch the new release this fall. Or, you know, just buy it on Amazon at your leisure. I remember reading about Jason Banker’s micro-budget horror debut.





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