A myriad of thoughts, ideas and overall randomness that constitutes my interests and my mind.
Wednesday, December 30, 2015
Saturday, December 19, 2015
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Wednesday, September 23, 2015
Robert Garlen's X-MEN (2000) Cast
(Note: For the Sake of Simplicity I am using the line-up from the film itself, not adding any characters, because for my vision it's not a necessity. Also Images of the actors used for several different actors are as far back as 1994 and as new as maybe 2001, it was at times a bit tough to find images appropriate from the years 1999/2000 so I gave myself a bit of leeway. I hope everyone enjoys this cast.)
You know,
I am one of the few fans who love the X-Men Movies (X-Men, X2, X-Men First
Class, The Wolverine, X-Men Days of Future Past, all 5 are great), but also like most fans, I agree they haven’t
really looked like X-Men Movies. I always thought about it and I felt that they
could have made the film look more of a Comic Book without ruining the
integrity or the seriousness of the material. I often wondered who would be a
Director Or a Writer, or a Composer ballsy enough to take on such a venture, So
now, gaze into my take of a 2000 X-Men Movie Made to be more like the Comic
Books.
Saturday, August 8, 2015
Bob Garlen Presents: Red Dragon (1984) Fan Cast
October of 1981 a Novel debuted. A Crime-Thriller that would introduce one of Cinema's most popular, beloved, and interesting characters... Hannibal Lecter.
A second family has been massacred by the terrifying serial killer the press has christened "The Tooth Fairy." Special Agent Jack Crawford turns to the one man who can help restart a failed investigation, Will Graham. Graham is the greatest profiler the FBI ever had, but the physical and mental scars of capturing Hannibal Lecter have caused Graham to go into early retirement. Now, Graham must turn to Lecter for help.
In 1986 The Novel was turned into the Critically Acclaimed Box Office Failure Dubbed "Manhunter", Written and Directed by Michael Mann. It became a cult hit, and introduced "Hannibal Lecktor" to the big screen, as well as introducing Will Graham and "Francis Dollarhyde." But I was never a fan of Mann's vision of Harris' novel. In fact, I found it more-or-less underdeveloped. The Acting was fine, the Directing was decent, but there felt a serious lack of substance, Trading in a shocking ending for a typical, albeit short, 80's styled gunfight set to "In Da Gadda Da Vidda" from Iron Butterfly.
In all honesty, I just felt Harris' novel deserved better. A better script, a better cast, a better more equipped director. Since then the story, and Novels of Harris have seen due respect in the form of Jonathan Demme's The Silence of the Lambs, Brett Ratner's Red Dragon, and of course, NBC's Hannibal. But What if we could go back to an appropriate time, and do Red Dragon Proper? Let's take a trip to 1984 and see what Red Dragon could have been back then, should the stars have aligned properly...
Composer: A film score (also sometimes called film music, background music, or incidental music) is original music written specifically to accompany a film. The score forms part of the film's soundtrack, which also usually includes dialogue and sound effects, and comprises a number of orchestral, instrumental or choral pieces called cues which are timed to begin and end at specific points during the film in order to enhance the dramatic narrative and the emotional impact of the scene in question.
Michael Kamen [Notable Works: Boardwalk, Venom, The Dead Zone]: His Score for the Dead Zone says everything Why I chose him to Score the 80's version of Red Dragon. I remember reading an interview with him over scoring The Dead Zone and his neighbors had screamed at him to stop playing, citing the music was giving their children nightmares. That proved it to me. He would have scored the most frightening score imaginable.
Screenwriter(s): A screenplay or script is a written work by screenwriters for a film, video game or television program. These screenplays can be original works or adaptations from existing pieces of writing. In them, the movement, actions, expression, and dialogues of the characters are also narrated. A play for television is also known as a teleplay.
Francis Ford Coppola [Notable Works: Dementia 13, Patton, The Great Gatsby] & Jeffrey Boam [Notable Works: Straight Time, The Dead Zone]: I am not a Cronenberg fan, not that he's a bad filmmaker I just hate a lot of his opinions. But he was a genius, and hiring Jeffrey Boam to script the Dead Zone was genius. He did a fantastic job, Boam had the beat and the spirit of the novel in script form, and for that He would be the screenwriter I would want to see handle Red Dragon, paring him up with Francis Ford only enhances that. Coppola is a legend as a screenwriter and as a Director, and he would have been phenomenal at adapting Red Dragon, there's no doubt that the two of them together adapting Red Dragon would have made the movie absolutely perfect.
Director: Directors are responsible for overseeing creative aspects of a film under the overall control of the film producer. They often develop the vision for a film and carry out the vision, deciding how the film should look, in other words they make their vision come to life. They are responsible for turning the script into a sequence of shots. They also direct what tone it should have and what an audience should gain from the cinematic experience. Film directors are responsible for deciding camera angles, lens effects and lighting with the help of the cinematographer and set design with the production designer. They will often take part in hiring the cast and key crew members. They coordinate the actors' moves, or blocking and also may be involved in the writing, financing and editing of a film.
Francis Ford Coppola [Notable Works: Apocalypse Now, The Godfather, The Outsiders]: Coppola is a legend, An Oscar winner who in the 1980's had a name that carried weight. Giving him access to Red Dragon (which I view as the Predominant Crime Novel of the 20th century) is a strong fit. His name would help the film gross, but his style and dedication to such source material and how he uses the spine of it to tell an interesting tale. He would have out-directed Michael Mann in adapting the Harris Novel.
Will Graham [Height: 5' 10", Age: 40's]: He grew up poor in Louisiana, eventually moving to New Orleans, where he became a homicide detective. He leaves New Orleans to attend graduate school in forensic science at George Washington University. After attaining his degree, Graham goes to work for the FBI's crime lab. Following exceptional work both in the crime lab and in the field, Graham is given a post as teacher at the FBI Academy. During his career in the FBI, Graham is given the title of 'Special Investigator' while he is in the field.
Chris Sarandon [Height: 6' 1", Age: 42 (in 1984), Notable Works: Dog Day Afternoon, The Sentinel, Protocol]: Chris was someone I had to cast. He had to be Will Graham. He's got the feel, the look, and the presence of the character. He would have been the Quintessential Will. He's just "It" he is the actor who is perfect for Graham.
Jack Crawford [Height: N/A, Age: 50's]: Jack Crawford is the agent-in-charge at the Behavioral Science Unit of the FBI, he visits Will Graham in his home and manipulates him into returning to the FBI to investigate the "Tooth Fairy" killings, and is happy with his successful manipulations
Paul Newman [Height: 5' 9", Age: 59 (in 1984), Notable Works: The Sting, The Drowning Pool, The Verdict]: Paul is a legend. He's an actor's actor. He's a Guru of acting, and having him tackle that edge and bringing that to Jack Crawford, the Head of Behavioral Science feels right. Paul would be the perfect Crawford for Red Dragon.
Dr. Alan Bloom [Height: N/A, Age: 40's-50's]: Bloom works at the Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago and is a consultant to the FBI behavioral-science section. He doesn't typically meet with Jack Crawford and Will Graham until a serial killer appears to be active. He serves as a guest lecturer at the behavioral-science section of the FBI Academy.at Quantico, and also serves as an examiner for Ph.D. candidates. He has known Dr. Chilton for years, and he unsuccessfully attempted to profile/understand Hannibal's pathology.
Robert Duvall [Height: 5' 9 1/2", Age: 53 (In 1984), Notable Works: True Confessions, Apocalypse Now, The Natural]: Robert is a Veteran actor, a great mind on set and well known for giving some downright legendary performances. He is a Francis Ford regular, and originally I didn't have Dr. Bloom in this cast, but remembering how he was a key figure it was important to add him in. Robert has an intelligence about him that really allows him to access that and would be a great actor for this role.
Molly Foster Graham [Height: 5' 10", Age: 30's]: Molly Foster Graham is Will Graham's wife. She is the same height as Will, five feet ten inches. She runs a dress shop and has a "good ramshackle house on Sugarloaf Key" (an island in the lower Florida Keys). She is very protective of Will and doesn't like Jack Crawford.
Kim Cattrall [Height: 5' 6 1/2", Age: 28 (1984), Notable Works: Rosebud, Ticket to Heaven, Porky's]: I'm a huge fan of Kim's work. She's always been great at balancing the tightrope between comedic and dramatic performances, always knowing when to switch, but it would be nice to see her in a role that really puts her under the gun and get her into a situation where she is as fearful for her life as she can be, and see how as an actress she portrays that.
William Foster Graham [Height: N/A, Age: 11]: Willy Foster Graham is Will Graham's 11-year old stepson. Willy's father had been a baseball player, and a good one. He and Willy's mother (Molly) married in college. He died when Willy was six. Willy still watched baseball whenever he can.
Wil Wheaton [Height: N/A, Age: 12 (in 1984), Notable Works: The Secret of NIMH, The Buddy System, Hambone and Hillie]: Wil is an actor who everyone saw had raw talent. Child actors are known for being universally terrible but somehow he edged that out and became one of the greats. The age of him and his talent as an actor made him perfect for this role.
Freddy Lounds [Height: 5' 9" {Estimated}, Age: 30's]: Freddy Lounds is good reporter - intelligent, brave, and a good eye for a story. He has great energy and patience. He is also obnoxious and therefore disliked by news executives, and has an inability to keep himself out of his stories.
Michael Keaton [Height: 5' 9", Age: 33 (In 1984), Notable Works: Mr. Mom, Johnny Dangerously, Night Shift]: Michael Keaton is one of the best actors I've ever seen. He could have played Will or Lecter. But the nature of the timeline and his comedic background I elected him as scumbag Journalist Freddy Lounds. He's a great actor and has a great pedigree of playing morally questionable characters. Frankly he's just damn perfect for Lounds.
Dr. Frederick Chilton [Height: 6' 1" {Estimated}, Age: 30's]: Dr. Frederick Chilton is chief of staff at the Chesapeake State Hospital for the Criminally Insane, which houses Hannibal Lecter.
Kelsey Grammer [Height: 6' 1", Age: 29 (In 1984), Notable Works: Cheers, Kennedy, George Washington]: No one, I mean NO ONE in Hollywood has ever been able to absolutely play the most stuck up unlikeable (or likeable for that matter) prick like Kelsey. He's got the attitude and presence to really pull this role off as well as Anthony Held ever did.
Dr. Hannibal Lecter [Height: 5' 9" {Estimated}, Age: 40's]: A Lithuanian-American serial killer, notorious for his habit of consuming his victims, earning him the nickname "Hannibal the Cannibal". Orphaned at a young age, Lecter moved to the USA, becoming a successful psychiatrist. He was eventually caught by Will Graham, who later consulted him for advice on capturing the "Tooth Fairy". Lecter was a small and sleek man, but was deceptively strong. His left hand had a condition called mid ray duplication polydactyly, i.e. a duplicated middle finger. Lecter's eyes were a shade of maroon, and reflected the light in "pinpoints of red". He also had small white teeth and dark, slicked-back hair with a widow's peak.
John Hurt [Height: 5' 9", Age: 44 (In 1984), Notable Works: 1984, The Elephant Man, Alien]: John is a remarkable actor, He's exactly how one would picture Lecter only from reading the book. He's a small man, with the perfect complimenting features to portray Lecter. But he has a very inherently sinister voice, and that voice can switch from polite banter, intellectual conversation, to downright hateful manipulation. He's in all forms what would have been the perfect actor for Lecter in the 1980's.
Reba McClane [Height: 5' 8" {Estimated}, Age: 20's-30's]: Reba McClane is the girlfriend of Francis Dolarhyde, aka 'The Tooth Fairy Killer'. Blind since age 3 her last sight as remembered was a panther at the zoo.
Jamie Lee Curtis [Height: 5' 7", Age: 26 (In 1984), Notable Works: Halloween, Terror Train, Trading Places]: I'm a Jamie fan. I love her work, she's a talented woman and seeing her in her early work it's very apparent she has always been a strong actress but hasn't really played a role quite like this. A role where she is intimately close but never realizes that danger, while also pulling a softer side for the performer opposite her. It's a challenge that would have been great to see her tackle, added on without the use of sight.
Francis Dolarhyde [Height: 6' 2" {Estimated}, Age: 40's]: Dolarhyde is a serial killer who murders entire families. He is nicknamed "The Tooth Fairy" due to his tendency to bite his victims' bodies, the uncommon size and sharpness of his teeth and other apparent oral fixations. He kills at the behest of an alternate personality; he refers to his other self as "The Great Red Dragon" after William Blake's painting The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed in Sun. Dolarhyde is a bodybuilder and exceptionally strong; it is mentioned in the novel that even in his early forties, Dolarhyde could have successfully competed in regional bodybuilding competitions.
Rutger Hauer [Height: 6' 1", Age: 40 (In 1984), Notable Works: Blade Runner, Nighthawks, A Breed Apart]: Rutger is an actor who's made himself famous from playing sinister villains. He always adds a such a new dimension to his characters. Seeing him as Roy Batty in Blade Runner and comparing him to the other actors I was considering, he seemed like a perfect fit. He had a great athletic build, a frightening voice, and the talent to play such a maniac as Dolarhyde with the emotional turmoil the character faces. He would have been absolutely remarkable in the role.
A second family has been massacred by the terrifying serial killer the press has christened "The Tooth Fairy." Special Agent Jack Crawford turns to the one man who can help restart a failed investigation, Will Graham. Graham is the greatest profiler the FBI ever had, but the physical and mental scars of capturing Hannibal Lecter have caused Graham to go into early retirement. Now, Graham must turn to Lecter for help.
In 1986 The Novel was turned into the Critically Acclaimed Box Office Failure Dubbed "Manhunter", Written and Directed by Michael Mann. It became a cult hit, and introduced "Hannibal Lecktor" to the big screen, as well as introducing Will Graham and "Francis Dollarhyde." But I was never a fan of Mann's vision of Harris' novel. In fact, I found it more-or-less underdeveloped. The Acting was fine, the Directing was decent, but there felt a serious lack of substance, Trading in a shocking ending for a typical, albeit short, 80's styled gunfight set to "In Da Gadda Da Vidda" from Iron Butterfly.
In all honesty, I just felt Harris' novel deserved better. A better script, a better cast, a better more equipped director. Since then the story, and Novels of Harris have seen due respect in the form of Jonathan Demme's The Silence of the Lambs, Brett Ratner's Red Dragon, and of course, NBC's Hannibal. But What if we could go back to an appropriate time, and do Red Dragon Proper? Let's take a trip to 1984 and see what Red Dragon could have been back then, should the stars have aligned properly...
1984
Composer: A film score (also sometimes called film music, background music, or incidental music) is original music written specifically to accompany a film. The score forms part of the film's soundtrack, which also usually includes dialogue and sound effects, and comprises a number of orchestral, instrumental or choral pieces called cues which are timed to begin and end at specific points during the film in order to enhance the dramatic narrative and the emotional impact of the scene in question.
Michael Kamen [Notable Works: Boardwalk, Venom, The Dead Zone]: His Score for the Dead Zone says everything Why I chose him to Score the 80's version of Red Dragon. I remember reading an interview with him over scoring The Dead Zone and his neighbors had screamed at him to stop playing, citing the music was giving their children nightmares. That proved it to me. He would have scored the most frightening score imaginable.
Screenwriter(s): A screenplay or script is a written work by screenwriters for a film, video game or television program. These screenplays can be original works or adaptations from existing pieces of writing. In them, the movement, actions, expression, and dialogues of the characters are also narrated. A play for television is also known as a teleplay.
Francis Ford Coppola [Notable Works: Dementia 13, Patton, The Great Gatsby] & Jeffrey Boam [Notable Works: Straight Time, The Dead Zone]: I am not a Cronenberg fan, not that he's a bad filmmaker I just hate a lot of his opinions. But he was a genius, and hiring Jeffrey Boam to script the Dead Zone was genius. He did a fantastic job, Boam had the beat and the spirit of the novel in script form, and for that He would be the screenwriter I would want to see handle Red Dragon, paring him up with Francis Ford only enhances that. Coppola is a legend as a screenwriter and as a Director, and he would have been phenomenal at adapting Red Dragon, there's no doubt that the two of them together adapting Red Dragon would have made the movie absolutely perfect.
Director: Directors are responsible for overseeing creative aspects of a film under the overall control of the film producer. They often develop the vision for a film and carry out the vision, deciding how the film should look, in other words they make their vision come to life. They are responsible for turning the script into a sequence of shots. They also direct what tone it should have and what an audience should gain from the cinematic experience. Film directors are responsible for deciding camera angles, lens effects and lighting with the help of the cinematographer and set design with the production designer. They will often take part in hiring the cast and key crew members. They coordinate the actors' moves, or blocking and also may be involved in the writing, financing and editing of a film.
Francis Ford Coppola [Notable Works: Apocalypse Now, The Godfather, The Outsiders]: Coppola is a legend, An Oscar winner who in the 1980's had a name that carried weight. Giving him access to Red Dragon (which I view as the Predominant Crime Novel of the 20th century) is a strong fit. His name would help the film gross, but his style and dedication to such source material and how he uses the spine of it to tell an interesting tale. He would have out-directed Michael Mann in adapting the Harris Novel.
Will Graham [Height: 5' 10", Age: 40's]: He grew up poor in Louisiana, eventually moving to New Orleans, where he became a homicide detective. He leaves New Orleans to attend graduate school in forensic science at George Washington University. After attaining his degree, Graham goes to work for the FBI's crime lab. Following exceptional work both in the crime lab and in the field, Graham is given a post as teacher at the FBI Academy. During his career in the FBI, Graham is given the title of 'Special Investigator' while he is in the field.
Chris Sarandon [Height: 6' 1", Age: 42 (in 1984), Notable Works: Dog Day Afternoon, The Sentinel, Protocol]: Chris was someone I had to cast. He had to be Will Graham. He's got the feel, the look, and the presence of the character. He would have been the Quintessential Will. He's just "It" he is the actor who is perfect for Graham.
Jack Crawford [Height: N/A, Age: 50's]: Jack Crawford is the agent-in-charge at the Behavioral Science Unit of the FBI, he visits Will Graham in his home and manipulates him into returning to the FBI to investigate the "Tooth Fairy" killings, and is happy with his successful manipulations
Paul Newman [Height: 5' 9", Age: 59 (in 1984), Notable Works: The Sting, The Drowning Pool, The Verdict]: Paul is a legend. He's an actor's actor. He's a Guru of acting, and having him tackle that edge and bringing that to Jack Crawford, the Head of Behavioral Science feels right. Paul would be the perfect Crawford for Red Dragon.
Dr. Alan Bloom [Height: N/A, Age: 40's-50's]: Bloom works at the Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago and is a consultant to the FBI behavioral-science section. He doesn't typically meet with Jack Crawford and Will Graham until a serial killer appears to be active. He serves as a guest lecturer at the behavioral-science section of the FBI Academy.at Quantico, and also serves as an examiner for Ph.D. candidates. He has known Dr. Chilton for years, and he unsuccessfully attempted to profile/understand Hannibal's pathology.
Robert Duvall [Height: 5' 9 1/2", Age: 53 (In 1984), Notable Works: True Confessions, Apocalypse Now, The Natural]: Robert is a Veteran actor, a great mind on set and well known for giving some downright legendary performances. He is a Francis Ford regular, and originally I didn't have Dr. Bloom in this cast, but remembering how he was a key figure it was important to add him in. Robert has an intelligence about him that really allows him to access that and would be a great actor for this role.
Molly Foster Graham [Height: 5' 10", Age: 30's]: Molly Foster Graham is Will Graham's wife. She is the same height as Will, five feet ten inches. She runs a dress shop and has a "good ramshackle house on Sugarloaf Key" (an island in the lower Florida Keys). She is very protective of Will and doesn't like Jack Crawford.
Kim Cattrall [Height: 5' 6 1/2", Age: 28 (1984), Notable Works: Rosebud, Ticket to Heaven, Porky's]: I'm a huge fan of Kim's work. She's always been great at balancing the tightrope between comedic and dramatic performances, always knowing when to switch, but it would be nice to see her in a role that really puts her under the gun and get her into a situation where she is as fearful for her life as she can be, and see how as an actress she portrays that.
William Foster Graham [Height: N/A, Age: 11]: Willy Foster Graham is Will Graham's 11-year old stepson. Willy's father had been a baseball player, and a good one. He and Willy's mother (Molly) married in college. He died when Willy was six. Willy still watched baseball whenever he can.
Wil Wheaton [Height: N/A, Age: 12 (in 1984), Notable Works: The Secret of NIMH, The Buddy System, Hambone and Hillie]: Wil is an actor who everyone saw had raw talent. Child actors are known for being universally terrible but somehow he edged that out and became one of the greats. The age of him and his talent as an actor made him perfect for this role.
Freddy Lounds [Height: 5' 9" {Estimated}, Age: 30's]: Freddy Lounds is good reporter - intelligent, brave, and a good eye for a story. He has great energy and patience. He is also obnoxious and therefore disliked by news executives, and has an inability to keep himself out of his stories.
Michael Keaton [Height: 5' 9", Age: 33 (In 1984), Notable Works: Mr. Mom, Johnny Dangerously, Night Shift]: Michael Keaton is one of the best actors I've ever seen. He could have played Will or Lecter. But the nature of the timeline and his comedic background I elected him as scumbag Journalist Freddy Lounds. He's a great actor and has a great pedigree of playing morally questionable characters. Frankly he's just damn perfect for Lounds.
Dr. Frederick Chilton [Height: 6' 1" {Estimated}, Age: 30's]: Dr. Frederick Chilton is chief of staff at the Chesapeake State Hospital for the Criminally Insane, which houses Hannibal Lecter.
Kelsey Grammer [Height: 6' 1", Age: 29 (In 1984), Notable Works: Cheers, Kennedy, George Washington]: No one, I mean NO ONE in Hollywood has ever been able to absolutely play the most stuck up unlikeable (or likeable for that matter) prick like Kelsey. He's got the attitude and presence to really pull this role off as well as Anthony Held ever did.
John Hurt [Height: 5' 9", Age: 44 (In 1984), Notable Works: 1984, The Elephant Man, Alien]: John is a remarkable actor, He's exactly how one would picture Lecter only from reading the book. He's a small man, with the perfect complimenting features to portray Lecter. But he has a very inherently sinister voice, and that voice can switch from polite banter, intellectual conversation, to downright hateful manipulation. He's in all forms what would have been the perfect actor for Lecter in the 1980's.
Reba McClane [Height: 5' 8" {Estimated}, Age: 20's-30's]: Reba McClane is the girlfriend of Francis Dolarhyde, aka 'The Tooth Fairy Killer'. Blind since age 3 her last sight as remembered was a panther at the zoo.
Jamie Lee Curtis [Height: 5' 7", Age: 26 (In 1984), Notable Works: Halloween, Terror Train, Trading Places]: I'm a Jamie fan. I love her work, she's a talented woman and seeing her in her early work it's very apparent she has always been a strong actress but hasn't really played a role quite like this. A role where she is intimately close but never realizes that danger, while also pulling a softer side for the performer opposite her. It's a challenge that would have been great to see her tackle, added on without the use of sight.
Francis Dolarhyde [Height: 6' 2" {Estimated}, Age: 40's]: Dolarhyde is a serial killer who murders entire families. He is nicknamed "The Tooth Fairy" due to his tendency to bite his victims' bodies, the uncommon size and sharpness of his teeth and other apparent oral fixations. He kills at the behest of an alternate personality; he refers to his other self as "The Great Red Dragon" after William Blake's painting The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed in Sun. Dolarhyde is a bodybuilder and exceptionally strong; it is mentioned in the novel that even in his early forties, Dolarhyde could have successfully competed in regional bodybuilding competitions.
Rutger Hauer [Height: 6' 1", Age: 40 (In 1984), Notable Works: Blade Runner, Nighthawks, A Breed Apart]: Rutger is an actor who's made himself famous from playing sinister villains. He always adds a such a new dimension to his characters. Seeing him as Roy Batty in Blade Runner and comparing him to the other actors I was considering, he seemed like a perfect fit. He had a great athletic build, a frightening voice, and the talent to play such a maniac as Dolarhyde with the emotional turmoil the character faces. He would have been absolutely remarkable in the role.
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
Thursday, April 16, 2015
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
The Suicide Squad
The United
States Government has a secretive Black Ops Organization known as Argus,
led by Former Director of the F.B.I. Amanda Waller, Argus has become
the top dog in the U.S.'s Black Ops/Covert Mission department. Word has
Broken out that The U.S. Government is attempting to kill The Joker, via
the organization Checkmate, led by Maxwell Lord.
Ordered by Current C.I.A. Director Alan Scott, Waller is to assemble a Black Ops team to collect the Joker and take him to a disclosed location so he can be debriefed on possible Government wide threats hiding in Gotham City, and the Identity of the Batman. Making Joker the most valuable asset in the Governments attempted control over Superheroes.
Unable to put together a full team of Government Agents, Waller enlists the aid of several jailed Supervillains, forming an off the books Task Force, for Black Ops Missions the Government cannot be connected to. Designation Task Force X is assembled, and are implanted with remote charges that will detonate on orders by Waller. The team that has worked together as villains have to work together as heroes.
Not suited by the official Government designation, the Team Gives itself a nickname fit for every member... The Suicide Squad.
Ordered by Current C.I.A. Director Alan Scott, Waller is to assemble a Black Ops team to collect the Joker and take him to a disclosed location so he can be debriefed on possible Government wide threats hiding in Gotham City, and the Identity of the Batman. Making Joker the most valuable asset in the Governments attempted control over Superheroes.
Unable to put together a full team of Government Agents, Waller enlists the aid of several jailed Supervillains, forming an off the books Task Force, for Black Ops Missions the Government cannot be connected to. Designation Task Force X is assembled, and are implanted with remote charges that will detonate on orders by Waller. The team that has worked together as villains have to work together as heroes.
Not suited by the official Government designation, the Team Gives itself a nickname fit for every member... The Suicide Squad.
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Oscars
Well the Nominee's are out for the Oscars, no Surprise that Andy Serkis got snubbed. I was surprised Nolan didn't get a nomination but he's not too desperate for one so I'm at peace with that. The big win in my opinion was Michael Keaton getting it for Birdman. Heard nothing but good reviews on the film and I knew he'd get the Nod after I saw he won the Golden Globe, which gives him a rough 50/50 chance but I seriously think that with his time in the industry and how well he's re-adapted himself to fit different areas of characters he should get it. The guy who played Mr. Mom was also responsible for Batman, Beetlejuice, Birdman, and Peter McCabe is due for an Oscar.
Also, why hasn't anyone remade Desperate Measures, that film was awesome. Michael was one hell of a villain in that. I think the Academy is Keaton's peers. They've known or worked with him in some capacity and see that he is fun. I think he will win and I root for him, but I can't say I'd be surprised if he doesn't get it. Anywho I'm for Michael Keaton on this one. I like the guy, yeah it's cause he was my Batman (sorry Kevin, but I saw Michael first) and He's always a fun guy. He gets the spirit of old and new filmmaking. He's having fun, but he is also committed to sending a message in his performance and in his chosen films. Sure you might not like a lot of them, you're entitled too. But I have really enjoyed his filmography. Even Duplicity (which again, surprised there's no remake there, sounds like a movie born for Zach Galifianakis).
Tell me who do you want to win the Big Prizes? Outside of Keaton I'm mostly riding the Paul Wes Anderson ticket. He's a filmmaker with vision and budget.
Also, why hasn't anyone remade Desperate Measures, that film was awesome. Michael was one hell of a villain in that. I think the Academy is Keaton's peers. They've known or worked with him in some capacity and see that he is fun. I think he will win and I root for him, but I can't say I'd be surprised if he doesn't get it. Anywho I'm for Michael Keaton on this one. I like the guy, yeah it's cause he was my Batman (sorry Kevin, but I saw Michael first) and He's always a fun guy. He gets the spirit of old and new filmmaking. He's having fun, but he is also committed to sending a message in his performance and in his chosen films. Sure you might not like a lot of them, you're entitled too. But I have really enjoyed his filmography. Even Duplicity (which again, surprised there's no remake there, sounds like a movie born for Zach Galifianakis).
Tell me who do you want to win the Big Prizes? Outside of Keaton I'm mostly riding the Paul Wes Anderson ticket. He's a filmmaker with vision and budget.
Thursday, January 8, 2015
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