Tuesday, December 30, 2008

FUNimation Adds Three Series


FUNimation Adds Three Series
'Gankutsuou,' 'Slayers,' 'Gungrave'

FUNimation has announced three anime properties for which it has obtained licenses, one new and two previously released in the U.S. Slayers Revolution is a 26-eposide series following the three previous Slayers series (Slayers, Slayers Next and Slayers Try); FUNimation will release the complete series on DVD.

FUNimation acquired the rights to the 24-episode Gankutsuou: The Count of Monte Cristo series from GDH. The series was previously distributed in the U.S. by Geneon.

And FUNimation will distribute the 26-episode series Gungrave for Geneon, in addition to previously announced Geneon titles Ergo Proxy, Hellsing Ultimate, and Black Lagoon.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Keanu Reeves Wants to Play Spike Spiegel in CBB live Action Movie

Keanu Reeves recently talked about the progress that producer Erwin Stoff, who has worked exclusively with Reeves for the past two decades, has made on a live action remake of Shinichiro Watanabe anime Cowboy Bebop in an interview with MTV. Reeves told MTV that he was eager to play the futuristic space cowboy Spike Spiegel.

"We've got the rights, we've got a writer, and he's putting together a scene outline," Reeves told MTV about the Cowboy Bebop project, which is set up at Fox. Reeves explained to MTV why he loved Cowboy Bebop"t's got a Western quality, a Western/film noir aspect to it. It's got so much style to it, and that's part of its appeal-that kind of Old West, bordertown, low-tech science fiction aspect."

According to Reeves the live action film will focus on the origins of the Bebop team of bounty hunters and will incorporate the conclusion to the 26-episode anime and at least some of the episodic adventures explored in the series.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Gundam 00 Premieres on the Sci Fi Channel Tonight

1st 2 episodes of re-imagining of robot war anime to run at 11:00 p.m. ET/PT

The Sci Fi television network in the United States will premiere Bandai Entertainment's English dubbing of the Mobile Suit Gundam 00 anime series with two episodes tonight at 11:00 p.m. ET/PT. The series provides a new interpretation of the Gundam robot war mythology that is set in our own real-world history.

In this wartorn future, mankind has splintered into three major factions over energy resources. However, a group known as the Celestial Being aims to eradicate war with four giant robotic mecha known as Gundams and their Gundam Meister pilots.

Fullmetal Alchemist's Seiji Mizushima directed this series with scripts supervised by Honey and Clover's Yousuke Kuroda. Loveless and Earthian manga creator Yun Kouga designed the original characters, which Basilisk's Michinori Chiba adapted for animation.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Gundam 00 to Premiere November 24th on Sci Fi Channel's Ani-Monday

November 11, 2008 (Cypress, CA) – Bandai Entertainment Inc. announced today that it has licensed the television rights to the series Mobile Suit Gundam 00” to Starz Media. The series will have its U.S. premiere on the Sci Fi Channel November 24th at 11 p.m. on SCI FI's “Ani- Monday” programming block. Two episodes will air that night and each week throughout the fall and spring of 2009.

Mobile Suit Gundam 00” is the latest installment in the long running franchise and takes place in the year 2307 A.D. When fossil fuels have been completely depleted and humanity has turned to solar energy to maintain its way of life, the controlling nations of the solar power find themselves at war with more impoverished countries. These sun-deprived countries threaten the “promised land of God,” which leads to the formation of a group called the Celestial Being, whose purpose is to end war and unite humanity through the use of four Gundam mech.

The series is directed by Seiji Mizushima whose past credits as a director and storyboard artist include Fullmetal Alchemist, Evangelion, and Appleseed: Ex Machina.

Following its U.S. broadcast it will be released on DVD in 2009 by Bandai Entertainment Inc.

Geneon to Merge with Universal Pictures Japan

The advertising and marketing company Dentsu has announced on Wednesday that it will transfer the majority ownership in its Geneon Entertainment home video subsidiary to NBC Universal's Universal Pictures International Entertainmnent (UPIE). UPIE has agreed to merge Geneon Entertainment with its own Universal Pictures Japan (UPJ), which handles operations in the country.

The transfer agreement was signed on November 7, and the actual transfer is scheduled to take place at the end of the month. The merger of UPJ and Geneon will take place in February of next year, and the resulting company will assume a new name. UPIE will own 80.1% of the new company, while Dentsu will retain 19.9%.

Currently, Geneon Entertainment has 3.6 billion yen (about US$37 million) in capital, which is 100% owned by Dentsu. Geneon Entertainment President and CEO Sumio Kiga oversaw 178 employees as of the end of October. Pioneer had originally established the company in March 1981 to produce videos in the Laserdisc format.

Dentsu acquired the majority of the outstanding shares in Pioneer Entertainment and renamed the company as Geneon Entertainment in 2003. Geneon has already been distributing Universal Pictures' DVDs in Japan since March of this year.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Captain America Gets a Director

Marvel Studios has chosen Joe Johnston to direct First Avenger: Captain America. Johnston, who storyboarded the convoy action sequence in Raiders of the Lost Ark and directed Jurassic Park III, Hidalgo, and the new remake of The Wolfman, began talking with Marvel about Captain America nearly two years ago and, according to The Reporter “much of the project’s current directions resulted from those early conversations.”

First Avenger: Captain America will be set during World War II and will likely include an origin saga. Cap will also be appearing in Marvel Studios’ Avengers, which will be set in the present.

Marvel Studios expects to hire writers for the Captain America film in the very near future. The film is currently slated to debut on May 6th, 2011.

Brett Ratner Helming Conan?

According to The Hollywood Reporter director Brett Ratner (Rush Hour, X-Men 3: The Last Stand) “is in final negotiations to take on literature’s most famous barbarian.” Be prepared for a massive collective wail from certain quarters of fandom that don’t see Ratner as anything more than a mediocre director of campy cop capers. Speaking of which, it is likely that Ratner will helm Beverly Hills Cop IV (penned by Wanted scribes Michael Brandt and Derek Haas) for Paramount before commencing his work on the new Conan movie—both films are tentatively slated to be released in 2010.

Co-produced by Nu Image/Millennium and Lionsgate, and written by Joshua Oppenheimer and Thomas Dean Donnelly, the new Conan film is an origin saga for the mesomorphic mutilator that hews closely to the spirit of the original Robert E. Howard stories (see “Conan Movie on the Fast Track”). According to The Reporter, the new Conan film will be R-rated (like the original John Milius 1982 Conan the Barbarian, and not PG-13 like the franchise-snuffing Conan the Destroyer from 1984) and have a budget of $85 million (down from earlier estimates of $100 million).

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Adult Swim Increases Anime Programming

Starting on November 8th the Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim is revising its schedule once again with a 5-hour anime block that begins at 1am (ET, PT). In a major format change, the Adult Swim Saturday night schedule will not involve repeating shows broadcast earlier the same night. The Saturday night Adult Swim schedule begins with two hours of its original English language programming, which is followed by ten anime series including Moribito: Guardian of the Spirit and Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2, both of which had been banished to the “Milkman” hour of 5am (see “Adult Swim Cuts Back on Anime”) and Shin Chan, which had been dropped off the schedule entirely.

The anime portion of the new Adult Swim schedule begins with Bleach at 1am followed by Moribito: Guardian of the Spirit (1:30am), Code Geass (2am), and Shin Chan (2:30am). Then comes a parade of the Adult Swim's greatest anime hits--most of which will start with their first episodes—Fooly Cooly (FLCL, 3am), Death Note (3:30am), Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex (4am), Cowboy Bebop (4:30am), Big O (5am), and Inuyasha (5:30am).
The new Adult Swim schedule represents an increase in the number of hours of anime programming from 6 hours to 8.5 hours per week and an even bigger expansion of the number of anime series, due largely to the ending of the practice of repeating the first 3 hours Adult Swim programming during the second late night 3 hour shift. Of course there is no telling how long Adult Swim will stick with this current schedule of anime programs.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

'Jurassic Park' author Michael Crichton dies

LOS ANGELES, California (CNN) -- Michael Crichton, who helped create the TV show "ER" and wrote the best-sellers "Jurassic Park," "The Andromeda Strain," "Sphere" and "Rising Sun," has died in Los Angeles, his public relations firm said in a news release.

Crichton died unexpectedly Tuesday "after a courageous and private battle against cancer," the release said.

He was 66.

Crichton, a medical doctor, was attracted to cautionary science tales.

"Jurassic Park" -- perhaps his best-known work -- concerned capturing the DNA of dinosaurs and bringing them to life on a modern island, where they soon run amok; "The Andromeda Strain," his first major fiction success, involves an alien microorganism that's studied in a special military compound after causing death in a nearby community.

Crichton also invited controversy with some of his scientific views. He was an avowed skeptic of global climate change, giving lectures warning against "consensus science." He later took on global warming and the theories surrounding it in his 2004 novel, "State of Fear," which attracted attacks in its own right from scientists, including NASA climatologist James Hansen. iReport.com: Were you a fan? Share your tributes.

Crichton was a distinctive figure in the entertainment business, a trained physician whose interests included writing, filmmaking and television. (He was physically distinctive as well, standing 6 feet 9 inches.)

He published "The Andromeda Strain" while he was still a medical student at Harvard Medical School. He wrote a story about a 19th-century train robbery, called "The Great Train Robbery," and then directed the 1979 film version.

He also directed several other films, including "Westworld" (1973), "Coma" (1978), "Looker" (1981) and "Runaway" (1984).

In 1993, while working on the film version of "Jurassic Park" with Steven Spielberg, he teamed with the director to create "ER." The NBC series set in a Chicago emergency room debuted in 1994 and became a huge hit, making a star of George Clooney. Crichton originally wrote the script for the pilot in 1974.

"Michael's talent out-scaled even his own dinosaurs of 'Jurassic Park,' " said Spielberg, a friend of Crichton's for 40 years, according to The Associated Press. "He was the greatest at blending science with big theatrical concepts, which is what gave credibility to dinosaurs again walking the Earth. ... Michael was a gentle soul who reserved his flamboyant side for his novels. There is no one in the wings that will ever take his place."

Crichton was "an extraordinary man. Brilliant, funny, erudite, gracious, exceptionally inquisitive and always thoughtful," "ER" executive producer John Wells told the AP. "No lunch with Michael lasted less than three hours and no subject was too prosaic or obscure to attract his interest. Sexual politics, medical and scientific ethics, anthropology, archaeology, economics, astronomy, astrology, quantum physics, and molecular biology were all regular topics of conversation."

Michael Crichton was born in Chicago in 1942 and grew up in New York's suburbs. His father was a journalist and Michael loved the writing profession. He went to medical school partly out of a concern he wouldn't be able to make writing a career, but the success of "The Andromeda Strain" in 1969 -- the book was chosen by the Book-of-the-Month Club and optioned by Hollywood -- made him change his mind, though he still had an M.D.

Though most of Crichton's books were major best-sellers involving science, he could ruffle feathers when he took on social issues. "Rising Sun" (1992) came out during a time when Americans feared Japanese ascendance, particularly when it came to technology. "Disclosure" (1994) was about a sexual harassment case.

Crichton won an Emmy, a Peabody, a Writers Guild of America Award for "ER," and won other awards as well.

"Through his books, Michael Crichton served as an inspiration to students of all ages, challenged scientists in many fields, and illuminated the mysteries of the world in a way we could all understand," the news release said.

Crichton was married five times and had one child.

A private funeral service is expected.

Marvel Confirms Film Movie Details


David Maisel, chairman of Marvel Studios, told reporters that the success of the 2008 theatrical and DVD releases of Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk paves the way for a slew of sequels and new films based on Marvel Comics properties and characters. Among those in the works are Iron Man 2, Thor, The First Avenger: Captain America and The Avengers, Maisel confirmed in a conference call with reporters on Nov. 4 to discuss the company's third-quarter earnings.

As previously reported, Maisel also said that Marvel Studios will, for cost efficiency purposes, relocate its headquarters to the Raleigh Studios facility in Manhattan Beach, Calif. All the upcoming movies will be shot at Raleigh Studios, with post-production work done there as well.

"2010 is scheduled to bring Iron Man 2 and Thor, while 2011 has The First Avenger: Captain America and the Avengers movie," Maisel said. "We've announced Robert Downey Jr. will star in both Iron Man 2 and The Avengers and Jon Favreau will direct Iron Man 2 and executive-produce The Avengers. We will be making other talent and director announcements as these deals are finalized."

Iron Man star Robert Downey Jr. will be back for the sequel and for an Avengers movie.

Maisel added, "On one other note, by 2010 we also expect that our Spider-Man Broadway musical will premiere on Broadway. This is the musical directed by Julie Taymor, the director of The Lion King, with music written by Bono and The Edge from the rock band U2. In keeping with our conservative fiscal approach, we are not funding the show, but we are co-producing it and have a meaningful first-dollar gross participation, which could create significant upside if the show is successful and spawns multiple touring companies around the world."

Addressing the move to Raleigh Studios, Maisel said that, in addition to housing Marvel's studio headquarters on the premises, they will also have dedicated sound stages and pre- and post-production areas where the next four Marvel movies will be developed and shot.

"That's a significant move on Marvel, a significant investment in space," Maisel said. "We believe that by doing that, we will not only have cost efficiencies by being able to have all the productions under one roof and negotiate various volume discounts and other sorts of cost efficiencies, but also hopefully continue and have a better probability of having the quality that we all saw this past summer in the movies by being the hands-on producers, as we were with Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk."

In a press release issued in conjunction with the earnings call, Marvel Entertainment also confirmed the tentative release dates for company's upcoming film productions. Iron Man 2 is scheduled for a May 7, 2010, release, followed by Thor on July 16, 2010, The First Avenger: Captain America on May 6, 2011, and The Avengers on July 15, 2011. --Ian Spelling

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Samuel L. Jackson Reunites with Tarantino

*Samuel L. Jackson will reteam with his "Pulp Fiction" and "Jackie Brown" director Quentin Tarantino for the forthcoming WWII film "Inglorious Basterds" (Yes, 'Basterds' with an 'e'), according to film blog The Playlist.

The movie is a remake of the 1977 Italian movie about a group of American soldiers who are attacked by Germans while being escorted to military prison. The story follows five of the prisoners who managed to escape.

Jackson will reportedly serve as a narrator for the updated version, which is due in theaters next year. The blog site reports of Jackson being "present only in a few spots (beginning page 24), but [he] mostly pops up at random times in the script to add some context and background info."

Jackson's latest film is "Soul Men," starring opposite the late Bernie Mac. The two play estranged members of a one-time R&B group that reunites to honor another bandmate who recently died.

Afro Samurai Game, TV Movie Both Arrive in January

Namco Bandai will release its videogame adaptation of Takashi Okazaki's Afro Samurai manga and anime franchise for the Microsoft Xbox 360 and Sony PlayStation 3 consoles on January 27, 2009. Namco Bandai first announced the game in August 2005, more than a year before the January 2007 release of the original five-part anime miniseries. The company showcased a playable demo of the game at Comic-Con International 2008.

Afro Samurai will also be returning to Spike TV in January with Afro Samurai: Resurrection. The made-for-television movie will feature Samuel L. Jackson reprising his role of the titular character. Jackson will be joined by Lucy Liu (Charlie's Angels, Kill Bill) and Mark Hamill (Star Wars) in new character roles, as well as Yuri Lowenthal as Kuma, the teddy bear.

Funimation will release Afro Samurai: Resurrection on DVD in February.

"King of the Hill" to New Network

After Fox declined to order any new episodes of long-running animated series King of the Hill last week, it was feared that the series might end, but it appears that ABC may pick up the series, according to the Hollywood trades. ABC has already ordered another series, The Goode Family, from the KotH producers.

King of the Hill, which has reached 260 episodes, is considered too expensive for a cable network.

Despite Fox’s desire to move on, KotH is still getting ratings as good as shows considered strong on some of the broadcast networks, and recently booked its best ratings in a year.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Straczynski Updating 'Forbidden Planet'

Babylon 5 creator J. Michael Straczynski, who also wrote Clint Eastwood's upcoming Changeling, is writing a long-in-the-works update of the SF classic Forbidden Planet for Warner Brothers, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Joel Silver is producing via Silver Pictures.

Warner picked up the project on the down-low earlier this year. As late as last year, it was set up at DreamWorks, with David Twohy attached to direct. Prior to that, New Line had it. James Cameron, Nelson Gidding and Stirling Silliphant have been associated with the remake over the years.

Released in 1956, Planet told the tale of an expedition sent from Earth to check on a colony of scientists on a far-off planet. They find two members, a man who has found alien technology that doubled his intellect, Dr. Morbius, and his daughter, both of whom have managed to survive an unseen monster roaming the planet. The movie is loosely based on Shakespeare's The Tempest.

The movie, directed by Fred Wilcox, starred Walter Pidgeon, Anne Francis and Leslie Nielsen, but is perhaps best known for the character Robbie the Robot.

Horror Guild Awards Announced

Winners have been announced for this year's International Horror Guild Awards, which recognize outstanding achievements in the field of horror and dark fantasy. Winners were announced on Oct. 31 in an online presentation on the award's Web site. A complete list of winners follows.

Novel: The Terror by Dan Simmons

Long Fiction: Softspoken by Lucius Shepard

Mid-Length Fiction: "Closet Dreams" by Lisa Tuttle --John Joseph Adams

Short Fiction: "Honey in the Wound" by Nancy Etchemendy

Fiction Collection: Dagger Key and Other Stories by Lucius Shepard

Anthology: Inferno, Ellen Datlow, ed.

Periodical: Postscripts

Illustrated Narrative: The Nightmare Factory, Thomas Ligotti (creator/writer), Joe Harris and Stuart Moore (writers), Ben Templesmith, Michael Gaydos, Colleen Doran and Ted McKeever (illustrators)

Nonfiction: Mario Bava: All the Colors of Dark by Tim Lucas

Art: Elizabeth McGrath for "The Incurable Disorder"

IHG Living Legend: Peter Straub

This year's award will be the final presentation of the International Horror Guild Awards, which has been given out annually since 1994.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Samuel L. Jackson in 'Last Dragon' remake

*Samuel L. Jackson will suit up as the infamous Sho'Nuff, the Shogun of Harlem in Columbia Pictures' remake of the 1985 cult classic "The Last Dragon."

"I'm a huge fan of the original and look forward to bringing Sho'Nuff into the 21st century," Jackson told the Hollywood Reporter.

Columbia's updated version will be along the same lines of the original, centering on young martial arts student Leroy Green in his quest through the streets of New York to achieve the highest level of martial arts accomplishment, known as the Last Dragon. Those who achieve the high ranking possess the Glow, making them the greatest fighter alive.

The original, which also starred Taimak and then-Prince protégé Vanity, was released in March 1985 by TriStar Pictures. Julius Carey III, who portrayed Sho'Nuff in the original film, died in August of complications from pancreatic cancer.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Sony Drops First Trailer for Angels and Demons

It's not even Friday yet, but already the good folks at Sony Pictures are rewarding us for a long work week. Sony released the teaser trailer this morning for Angels and Demons, the followup to Dan Brown's highly successful book/movie The Da Vinci Code.

At first glance, the biggest improvement over the original movie is the subtraction of star Tom Hanks' mullet which was a major distraction in The Da Vinci Code. Also in this trailer is the first glance of Ewan McGregor as Carlo Ventresca, the Camerlengo of the Vatican Church.

You can view a high quality version on the movie's official site or simply watch the YouTube version.

Angels and Demons will debut in theaters on May 15, 2009.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

New "Easy Rawlins" movie slated for 2010.

Everyone's favorite Walter Mosley character "Easy Rawlins" returns to the screen in "Little Scarlet". This will be the second "Easy" novel to be filmed. Denzel Washington and Don Cheadle who starred in "Devil in a Blue Dress", will not return for the sequel. They will be replaced by Jeffrey Wright and Mos Def. The following plot was taken from www.imdb.com.

Janitor Ezekiel "Easy" Rawlins doubles as an unlicensed private investigator to help solve a brutal murder in the aftermath of the 1965 riots in Los Angeles.

Cheadle to follow "Iron Man" with "Avengers"

*Don Cheadle will see his new role of Jim Rhodes/War Machine in "Iron Man 2" continue on in "Iron Man 3," as well as "The Avengers," Marvel Studios' upcoming film about its team of superheroes.

According to the Hollywood Reporter, Cheadle signed on to perform in the action flick after his deal to replace Terrence Howard in the "Iron Man" movies was finalized.

Marvel's current slate is designed to introduce superhero characters via individual movies that lead up to the characters teaming up for "Avengers," which is set for a release in 2011.
Downey and Cheadle are the first stars to sign on for "Avengers," whose team roster features such heroes as Iron Man, Captain American, Hulk, Wasp, Giant Man, Hawkeye and Thor. Edward Norton portrayed Bruce Banner/Hulk in "Hulk," but the actor-writer-director clashed with the studio over the movie's cut. It is unclear whether Norton will return for "Avengers."

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Lee and Rickman Join Alice

Christopher Lee and Alan Rickman have joined the cast of Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland remake, DigitalSpy reported. Lee has taken on an undisclosed role, while Rickman will play the hookah-smoking Caterpillar, the site reported.

Eleanor Tomlinson is another new addition. She will star as Fiona Chataway, a friend of Alice created specifically for the Burton adaptation. Mia Wasikowska, Johnny Depp, Anne Hathaway, Helena Bonham Carter, Michael Sheen and Matt Lucas are also among the star-studded cast. Alice In Wonderland is scheduled for release in 2010.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Joseph to the the First Doctor Who?

David Tennant hasn't yet abandoned his starring role in the BBC SF series Doctor Who, but rumors have already begun circulating that Paterson Joseph--who guest-starred in the first season--may be the leading candidate to replace Tennant as the 11th Doctor. Joseph would be the first black actor to assay the iconic role. Joseph's agent reportedy denied the Doctor Who rumor when approached about it last week.

When SCI FI Wire contacted Joseph directly, his initial response was a text message that said, "I am on a list of God knows how many others, but flattered to be considered." That was followed by an e-mail a day later, saying, "The news on Who was news to me as of last Wednesday, when my agent said they'd had lots of journos asking if the rumors were true. That's all I know, and I'm very pleased to even be thought of in this way. It's a blast!" The rumor, which should be taken with a grain of salt, was first reported by British journalist Richard Johnston last week in his online column "Lying in the Gutters." Joseph played Roderick in the Doctor Who two-part episode "Bad Wolf/The Parting of the Ways."

Joseph's recent TV appearances include the U.K. series Peep Show, Green Wing and Hyperdrive, but he is probably best known to genre fans for his scene-stealing performance as the Marquis de Carabas in writer Neil Gaiman's short-lived 1996 BBC series Neverwhere. Perhaps more germane to this particular story is the actor's work in last year's Jekyll miniseries, which was created by Steven Moffat, who will be taking over as the new Doctor Who show runner in the upcoming fifth season in 2010. Did that role give Joseph the inside track? Only time will tell. While many Doctor Who purists are already resisting the notion of a black actor taking on the role, the biggest obstacle could actually be Joseph's role as Greg Preston in the BBC's upcoming revival of the 1970s post-apocalyptic drama Survivors. According to the show's producer Adrian Hodges (Primeval), "He's a lovely actor, and he has immense likability on screen.

To me, he has hero written and integrity written all over him, and he's a great actor. We're very pleased with him, and we won't kill him off anytime soon, I promise you that!" The fourth season of Doctor Who will be released in the United States on Nov. 18. The series is currently on hiatus in the United Kingdom but will continue with a series of one-off specials, after which a new production team will take over with season five in 2010. --Joe Nazzaro

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Don Cheadle Replaces Terrence Howard in 'Iron Man 2'

According to The Hollywood Reporter it will be Don Cheadle, not Terrence Howard, who will play Jim Rhodes (aka War Machine) in Iron Man 2. James Rupert Rhodes, who is one of Tony Stark’s closest confidants in the Iron Man comic series and who actually took over the mantle of Iron Man when Tony Stark lapsed into alcoholism, will likely play a larger role in Iron Man 2, something that was alluded to directly in the first film when Rhodes, played by Terrence Howard, looked longingly at the Iron Man suit and said, “Next time.”

Unfortunately, it won’t be Howard who gets to enjoy the expanded role. According to The Reporter “sources close to the deal said negotiations with Howard fell through over financial differences, among other reasons.” Cheadle, who was nominated for an Academy Award for his work in Hotel Rwanda and played memorable roles in Traffic, Out of Sight, and Crash, is one of the most highly regarded actors in Hollywood and certainly represents a continuation of the use of “A-list” actors in Marvel Studios’ films, something that was especially apparent in Iron Man (see “Heavy Metal Rules the DVD Charts”).

Robert Downey Jr. is expected to reprise his role as Tony Stark in Iron Man 2 and Gwyneth Paltrow will also be back as Pepper Potts. Director Jon Favreau is already signed for the sequel, which Justin Theroux is writing. The problem with sequels to extremely successful movies is that the folks involved on both sides of the camera quite naturally want a bigger share of the pie, which drives up production costs and makes the sort of financial success enjoyed by the original film a very difficult feat to duplicate.

Monday, October 13, 2008

"V" Returns to Primetime

Variety is reporting that ABC is developing a new adaptation of the 1980s science fiction miniseries V that is being written by Scott Peters, the co-creator and executive producer of The 4400. Warner Bros. Television, which produced the two original V miniseries and the V weekly series that aired 1984-1985, is behind the development of the new V as well.

The original V miniseries was an allegory of the holocaust and Nazi Germany, but Peters told Variety that he won’t be duplicating that concept, though “the new V will still focus on what happens when the masses have blind faith in their leaders,” and it will still open with shots of enormous fleets of alien spacecraft hovering over the world’s major cities.

The new series will center on a Homeland Security agent and her troubled son who becomes fixated on the aliens, though as was the case in the original V mini-series there will be a number of different plotlines revolving around various different characters both human and alien. Peters' new V series has nothing to do with the failed 2003 attempt to revive the property in a V: The Next Generation project that was created by Kenneth Johnson, the writer-producer-director of the original V miniseries.

The final episode of the first V miniseries scored a mammoth 40 share in the TV ratings and the series spawned a lot of merchandise ranging from an 18-issue comic book series from DC to lunch boxes, action figures, prop replicas and novels.

Tokyopop Meets CSI

Tokyopop has announced that it will release CSI: Interns, a full length OEL manga tied to the hit TV property, next September. The new work will not be a straight adaptation. Written by Sekou Hamilton, who has a TV background, with art by Steven Cummings (Pantheon High), CSI: Interns will tell the story of one of a group of teenagers taking part in an internship program at the Las Vegas Criminal Investigations Unit under the eyes of Gil Grissom and Catherine Meadows. When one of the bodies in the morgue turns out to be a classmate, things get too close for comfort.

The CSI manga will be one of a number of such OEL titles that Tokyopop is publishing, including its Blizzard titles, as well as Star Trek, Labyrinth, Ghostbusters, and Battlestar Galactica. As is the case with Star Trek, Ghostbusters, and BSG, there’s also a licensee producing American-style comics based on the property; IDW has the CSI comic license

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Opus comic Strip Ends November 2nd

'Opus' Comic Strip Ends November 2nd
Breathed to Write Children's Books
Published: 10/07/2008, Last Updated: 10/08/2008 12:42am

Editor and Publisher is reporting that cartoonist Berkeley Breathed is ending his Sunday-only comic strip Opus on November 2nd. The Opus strip, which debuted five years ago, is the third nationally syndicated strip that Breathed has produced. His most popular effort was his first, the Pulitzer Prize-winning Bloom County, which ran from 1980 to 1989, and was followed by the Sunday-only comic Outland, which ran from 1989 to 1995. Little Brown has published numerous collections of Breathed’s comics including an anthology of the best Opus material from all three strips.

Along with Bill Watterson (Calvin & Hobbes) and Gary Larson (The Farside), Breathed helped create a new golden age of the American comic strip in the 1980s. He pushed the envelope by interjecting political commentary into the comics page, and it is perhaps fitting that Opus should end his comic strip career imprisoned by government authorities with his fate to be revealed only on the Internet and not in the funny pages.

In addition to his three comic strips, Breathed has also published a number of children’s books including The Last Basselope, A Wish for Wings That Work, and the forthcoming Pete and Pickles, which will be released on October 16th. According to Editor & Publisher Breathed is now retiring from comic strips for good and in a parting shot that reveals his liberal bent, Breathed vowed to do his part to overcome the current political and financial crisis by writing funny stories for America’s kids, and called on John McCain to join him.

Saber Rider & the Star Sheriffs

VCI Entertainment is releasing the first 17 episodes of the 1980s cartoon series Saber Rider and the Star Sheriffs on November 18th. Produced in 1986 by World Events Production, the company responsible for Voltron, and based on the 1984 Studio Pierrot anime series Seijushi Bisumaruku (Star Musketeer Bismarck), the 52-episode Saber Rider aired in the U.S. from 1987 to 1989.

World Events rewrote and reworked the anime episodes (it’s Fireball, not Saber Rider, who is the prime hero of the original anime) and actually created six new episodes. The first two-disc Saber Rider and the Star Sherrifs DVD set (MSRP $29.99) contains 391 minutes of cartoon action presented in its original 4:3 aspect ratio.

The Saber Rider series demonstrates that the outer space western was not invented by the creators of Cowboy Bebop, Trigun, or Serenity. The series is set in the far flung future in the frontier outposts at the edge of the galaxy where Saber Rider is the leader of the Star Sheriffs, a special unit of Calvary Command charged with defending the galaxy from the growing threat of the Outriders.

The key to this interstellar defense is RAMROD (voiced by Peter Cullen, the voice of Optimus Prime in Transformers), a giant airborne battleship that can transform into a mega-robot complete with a mammoth six-gun who transforms to the rallying cry, "Head ’em up, move ‘em out. Power Stride and Ready to Ride

Friday, October 3, 2008

Fox Opts for more "Fringe" Benefits

The Hollywood trades are reporting that the Fox Network has picked up the option on a full season order for J.J. Abrams’ science fiction series Fringe. The order means nine more episodes of the series will be produced and will air during the second half of the current television season.

Fox’s action is in response to the show’s strong performance in the ratings. After solid ratings for the two-hour pilot, Fringe did extremely well when paired with Fox’s hit series House in an early season debut (see "Fringe Up in Second Week"). Ratings cooled somewhat when the competition got stiffer, but they have shown steady gains in the past two weeks and Fringe is attracting about 10.7 million total viewers and is tops among all the freshmen series in the coveted 18-47 demographic. Fringe is the second new series to receive a full season pick-up—the CW’s Beverly Hills 90210 was the first.

DC Comics is publishing a comic book series based on the Fringe TV series under its Wildstorm imprint (see “DC to Publish Fringe Comic”), though a recent announcement from the publisher stated that orders for the second, third, and fourth issues have been cancelled though they will all be resolicited. Fringe #2 is now slated for release in January, and Fox’s decision to opt for a full season pick-up means that the TV series will be airing in 2009 to support the Fringe comic book series

Warner Plans 'Yogi Bear' Feature

According to The Hollywood Reporter Warner Bros. is developing a live action/CGI animated hybrid feature film set in Jellystone Park and starring Hanna Barbera’s classic characters Yogi Bear and his smaller, but smarter, sidekick Boo Boo. Ash Brannon, co-writer and director of Surf’s Up will helm the film, most of which will be done in live action though Yogi and Boo Boo will be CGI animated characters.

Yogi Bear’s insouciant character and vocal stylings were inspired by Ed Norton, the sanitation engineer played by the immortal Art Carney in the classic Honeymooners TV series (just as Jackie Gleason’s Ralph Kramden was “appropriated” by Hanna Barbera as the model for Fred Flintstone). Yogi Bear first appeared as a guest star on the Huckleberry Hound show in 1958. With his overly confident attitude (“Smarter than the average bear!”) and his never-ending search for “pic-a-nic” baskets, Yogi soon got a show of his own in 1961, a series that remains a staple on the Cartoon Network’s vintage-themed Boomerang network.

According to The Reporter Joshua Sternin and Jeffrey Ventimilia (That 70s Show, Tooth Fairy) are writing the screenplay for the as-yet-untitled Yogi Bear feature.

Neil Gaiman's 'The Graveyard Book'

This week Harper Collins published Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book ($17.99), a 320-page young adult fantasy novel with illustrations by Dave McKean. The hero of the saga is a normal boy named Nobody Owens, who is known to his friends as "Bod." Bod would be even more normal if he weren’t an orphan, who is being brought up in a graveyard by ghosts—and he dares not leave the graveyard for fear that he will be attacked by a man named "Jack" who has already killed Bod’s parents.

Gaiman’s fertile imagination is on full display in this richly textured novel, which includes a mysterious graveyard gateway that leads to a desert in which there is an abandoned city populated only by ghouls, and then there is the ancient Indigo Man who lives under the hill, and the unforgettably strange and scary menace of the Sleer.

Gaiman’s previous YA novel Coraline has been made into a stop-motion animated feature film and adapted as a graphic novel by P. Craig Russell as well (see “Coraline Set for Feb. 6th Debut”).

Friday, September 26, 2008

Will Smith To Return For 'Legend' Prequel

Actor reteams with director Francis Lawrence for new film.

*Will Smith has agreed to reprise his role as scientist Robert Neville in a prequel to his 2007 blockbuster "I Am Legend."
Francis Lawrence will also return as director of the project, which is based on a detailed outline that was written over the past few months by Lawrence, Smith and the film's producers Akiva Goldsman and James Lassiter, according to Variety.
The prequel will chronicle the final days of humanity in New York before a man-made virus caused a plague that left Smith’s character the lone survivor among a mutated mob in the city.
Making a prequel was the only way to stretch a franchise that grossed $584 million worldwide for Warner Bros. and keep Smith in the lead role. His character was killed in the first film, after extracting a potential cure for the virus for the scattered survivors.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Depp Does Burton's 'Alice'

Johnny Depp has signed to play the Mad Hatter in Tim Burton’s upcoming Alice in Wonderland,as presented at a Disney event at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles and reported by the Hollywood trades and others. Burton and Depp have worked together frequently throughout their careers on films that have become cult and merchandise hits, and Alice has the potential to join that list.

The studio also announced that Depp will reprise his role as Jack Sparrow in Pirates of the Caribbean 4, and will play Tonto in the upcoming Lone Ranger film

The other big news at the event was primarily about Disney’s animated line-up. Cars 2 will be moved up to summer 2011 from 2012 (see "Disney Going 3-D"), and in the run-up, a series of animated Cars shorts will be shown on Disney Channel and before films in the theater. A new theme park attraction based on Cars will also open in Anaheim in 2011.

Del toro to Co-write Vampire Trilogy

Del Toro to Co-write Vampire Trilogy With Chuck Hogan

Guillermo del Toro, who’s directed the last two Hellboy films and is about to begin work on two Hobbit films, will co-write a trilogy of vampire novels with crime author Chuck Hogan. The first, The Strain, will be released next summer from HarperCollins imprint William Morrow. The three books will reveal progressively more information about an ancient vampiric race that originated in Old Testament times.

Monday, September 22, 2008

"Kung Fu Hustle" Helmer to Direct 'Green Hornet'

Stephen Chow Will Also Be 'Kato'

The Hollywood trades are reporting that Kung Fu Hustle director/star Stephen Chow will direct the new Green Hornet movie and also star as Kato. A slimmed-down Seth Rogen will portray Britt Reid, the newspaper publisher and nocturnal masked crimefighter, who was created by George W. Trendle and Fran Striker (the same team responsible for The Lone Ranger) for a 1930s radio show.

Sony/Columbia optioned the property in 2007 (see “Green Hornet’s Big Screen Buzz”) and Seth Rogen has been attached to the film for over a year (see “Green Hornet Gets Seth Rogen”), but the addition of Chow, who is a major martial arts star (and director) in Asia, provides much needed momentum to this project, which is now scheduled to hit theaters on June 25th, 2010.

The Green Hornet has appeared in a number of comic book series and in two 1940s movie serials, but the character’s most popular iteration was undoubtedly The Green Hornet TV series, which ran from 1966-1967 and introduced Bruce Lee to American audiences. Chow, whose Kung Fu Hustle was also produced by Sony/Columbia, was obviously pleased to be involved in the project, especially because of its connection to Bruce Lee, one his idols, commenting: “I'm excited to be taking on The Green Hornet -- obviously I've been a huge fan of the show since I was a kid. The idea of stepping into Bruce Lee's shoes as Kato is both humbling and thrilling, and to get the chance to direct the project as my American movie debut is simply a dream come true."

Well known for his innovative use of slapstick and absurdist humor in martial arts comedies such as Shaolin Soccer and Kung Fu Hustle, Stephen Chow appears to be the perfect choice both to reprise Lee’s role as Kato and to direct the film.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Cannell Confirms Hero Movie

Stephen J. Cannell, creator of the cult '80s TV series The Greatest American Hero, confirmed to fans that a feature film is in the works.

"We've written a screenplay, and we've hired a director, and we're in the midst of putting this together for the future," Cannell told an audience in Hollywood on Sept. 7 at a panel commemorating the Screen Actors Guild foundation's 75th anniversary.

The director is reportedly Stephen Herek, known for such '80s kitsch as Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure and Critters--a fact Cannell did not confirm at the reunion panel.

The entire cast, producers, writers and famed stuntman Dennis "Danger" Madalone joined Cannell for a lengthy Q&A session moderated by John Tesh, a Hero historian and husband of star Connie Sellecca.

After Cannell's movie announcement, Sellecca took the opportunity to lock in roles for herself and fellow original cast members William Katt and Robert Culp.

"I'm going to put Stephen on the spot," Sellecca said with a grin. "Cameos for us?"

"Absolutely guaranteed," Cannell responded. "More than cameos: acting jobs."

"I took a sneak peek at the [feature] script, and it's absolutely charming and wonderful," Katt told the rapt audience. "I know people are going to love it."

The Greatest American Hero ran for three seasons on ABC, 1981-'83, and centered on Ralph Hinkley (Katt), a teacher who comes into possession of a red alien suit that endows its wearer with superpowers--but he loses the instruction manual. Culp played Hinkley's FBI minder and Sellecca his long-suffering girlfriend.

The show is enjoying a renaissance of sorts, with a new comic book produced by Katt and producing partner Chris Folino under their Catastrophic Comics banner. The first issue should hit shelves in November.

Additionally, there are plans for a series of four-minute animated Web shorts, voiced by Katt, Culp and Sellecca.

"It"s a litmus test for Stephen's [film plans]," Katt said of the comic and shorts.

"The cast all felt--and I think the writers as well--[that] we had stories left to tell, and so that's what we’re doing," Katt said. "We're picking up where we left off, and I know that there's a great audience out there that is going to be receptive to that."

Katt added: "In the public arena, at Comic-Con and other [conventions] out there, we've found that there is a tremendous warm welcome still left waiting for The Greatest American Hero." --Jeff Otto

More X-Men Movies Possible

20th Century Fox is mulling the possibility of more X-Men spinoff movies, including a young X-Men project as well as Deadpool, based on a character played by Ryan Reynolds in the upcoming X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Variety reported.

The studio is even considering reviving the Daredevil franchise.

The report is part of a story assessing the studio's lackluster box-office performance during the summer of 2009.

Coming up for the studio: X-Men Origins: Wolverine on May 1, 2009; Night at the Museum 2: Escape From the Smithsonian on Memorial Day weekend; and Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs on the Fourth of July weekend.

For All the Die-Hard G. I. Joe Fans

IDW Reveals First Three G.I. Joe Titles
Coming Out of #0 in October
September 9, 2008

G.I. Joe #0 Cover
by Dave DormanIDW Publishing, which promised a far-reaching G.I. Joe publishing program when the license was acquired earlier this year (see “IDW Gets G.I. Joe”), has announced its first three G.I. Joe comic series for 2009, which will be introduced in its #0 issue in October. The three new series will launch sequentially in the first three months of 2009, and all will be promoted with multiple covers. Each of the three series is represented in the #0 issue by a short story by the series creative team.

G.I. Joe, by Chuck Dixon and Robert Atkins, launches in January with covers by Dave Johnson, Atkins, and for the first issue, a special wraparound cover by Gabriele Dell’Otto. The story is set after Larry Hama’s G.I. Joe series, and will feature a new set of adversaries, a shadowy organization introduced in the #0 issue in October.

G.I. Joe: Origins, by Larry Hama and Tom Feister with covers by Feister and Adrea Di Vito, launches in February. The storylines will look at the formation of the G.I. Joe organization and its members.

G.I. Joe: COBRA, a four-shot miniseries written by Christos Gage and Mike Costa with art by Antonio Fuso and covers by Fuso and Howard Chaykin, launches in March. The storyline follows a G.I. Joe member as he tries to infiltrate Cobra.

Other G.I. Joe titles planned for 2009 include deluxe reprints of older material and comics that lead into the August 7th release of the live action G.I. Joe feature film (see “G.I. Joe Lead Cast”). The G.I. Joe property will also get a boost early in 2009 with the launch of a series of short animations, written by Warren Ellis (see “Warren Ellis Writing G.I. Joe Cartoon”).

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Stephen Sommers Mulls Warner's Tarzan

Stephen Sommers is in negotiations to direct a big-screen version of Tarzan for Warner Brothers and producer Jerry Weintraub, Variety reported.

Sommers will also co-write the Tarzan script with Stuart Beattie. Sommers directed the recently wrapped G.I. Joe for Paramount, with Beattie penning the final draft of the screenplay.

Warner and Weintraub have been developing Tarzan since 2003, when John August was hired to pen a new take on the Edgar Rice Burroughs-created character. Two years ago, the studio was negotiating with Guillermo del Toro to direct.

Burroughs' Tarzan of the Apes was written in 1912. Onscreen, the ape-man character became strongly identified with Johnny Weismuller during the 1930s in MGM's series of features.

Del Toro Helming Frankenstein

Guillermo del Toro is now booked with films through 2017, including remakes of Frankenstein, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Slaughterhouse-Five, Variety reported.

Universal Pictures--which has a three-year first-look deal with the director--and del Toro are making a long-term commitment by setting up four directing projects, including the aforementioned movies.

The fourth project is an adaptation of Drood, a Dan Simmons novel that will be published in February by Little, Brown.

Del Toro's first priority is New Line and MGM's The Hobbit and its sequel, to which he has committed the next five years. He has begun writing Hobbit with Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens, collaborating via video conferencing and trips to New Zealand every three weeks.

While it's difficult to plan projects five years into the future, at this point Universal executives told the trade paper that Drood, based on the life of Charles Dickens, is the most likely to be del Toro’s first post-Hobbit directing vehicle.

Universal also still has its sights set on del Toro's pet project, an adaptation of H.P. Lovecraft's At the Mountains of Madness.

Also on the horizon: David Moody's apocalyptic novel Hater, which del Toro will produce with Mark Johnson but not direct, and Crimson Peak, a gothic romance spec script by del Toro and his Mimic collaborator Matthew Robbins, which del Toro will produce but not direct. (Universal is owned by NBC Universal, which also owns SCIFI.COM.)

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Fox and Warner "Watchmen" Feud Escalates

September 2, 2008

The legal battle lines have been drawn in the dispute between Warner Bros. and 20th Century Fox over the rights to create a screen adaptation of Alan Moore and Dave Gibbon’s Watchmen graphic novel. According to the New York Times, which reviewed papers filed in federal court in Los Angeles on Friday, lawyers for both sides have “laid plans for a frenzied fight.” Fox continues to request an injunction that would prohibit the planned March 6th debut of the Watchmen film directed by Zack Snyder, while Warner Bros. continues to maintain that there is no legal merit to Fox’s suit.

The dispute is centered on that murky corner of developmental hell known as “turnaround” in which a studio basically gives up on a project, but in order to save itself the potential embarrassment of a rejected film becoming a success for another studio, producers who take the project elsewhere have to give the original studio another look at the project anytime “changed elements” (new casting, new director, new script, new budget, etc.) come into play.

According to Warner Bros., Producer Lawrence Gordon offered the project to Fox once again in 2005 right before he took it to Warner Bros. The Times reports that Warners is asking for an April trial date, while Fox has called for a June trial. It appears likely that, if the dispute does go to trial, Universal, Legendary Pictures, and Paramount, who were all involved in the lengthy gestation of the Watchmen movie project, will “be drawn into the fray.”

While there are no signs of a deal yet, there is plenty of incentive to get one done. The slick Watchmen trailer has driven sales of the Watchmen graphic novel through the roof (see “A Million Copies of Watchmen”) and spurred excitement for the movie among a considerable fan base. The Watchmen movie is a potential 300-size Q1 hit for Warners, and irate fans are already considering a boycott of Fox films in retaliation against the studio's Watchmen lawsuit. If Fox does succeed in getting an injunction barring the March 6th debut of the Watchmen movie, it may well prove to be a Pyrrhic victory.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Torchwood Back for Season 3

Filming for the third season of the BBC's Doctor Who spinoff Torchwood (aired in the U.S. on BBC America), has begun in Cardiff, Wales, BBC Worldwide announced. The series, created and produced by Russell T. Davies, is scheduled to return in 2009, with a five-part miniseries titled Torchwood: Children of Earth.

The new season sees the Torchwood team embarking on a single action-packed adventure as they battle for the future of the human race against the fiercest force they have yet encountered. The highly motivated team includes John Barrowman as Capt. Jack Harkness, Eve Myles as Gwen Cooper and Gareth David-Lloyd as Ianto Jones. Also reprising their recurring roles are Kai Owen as Gwen's husband, Rhys, and Tom Price as PC Andy. Special guests in the five-part series include Peter Capaldi, who plays the role of Mr. Frobisher, a civil servant who is hiding a terrible secret; Paul Copely as Clem, a survivor still haunted by his past; and Liz May Brice as Johnson, a cynical covert government agent determined to expose Torchwood. "The new series of Torchwood is hugely bold and promises to be bigger and better than ever," Davies said in a statement.

"The audience is in for an amazing ride. This series is one big serial and the most ambitious story we've ever made, and we've got plenty of surprises in store." In a separate statement, Julie Gardner, Head of Drama, BBC Wales, said, "We hope to make Torchwood a gripping and surprising TV event with storylines that push our team into greater danger and sacrifice. Joining our main cast are some fantastic guest artists who will only add to making this unmissable TV." The second season of Torchwood will be released on DVD in the U.S. on Sept. 16.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

"Preacher" Defrocked

No Show on HBO

Mark Steven Johnson, the writer of the Preacher TV series for HBO (see “HBO To Do Preacher Series”), told Comics Continuum that the project is dead due to content issues. Johnson told the site “the new head of HBO felt it was just too dark and too violent and too controversial.”

This is the second stillborn attempt to develop Garth Ennis’ Vertigo series Preacher for the screen (large or small). A movie that was in development earlier this decade (see “Preacher to Start Shooting in June”) has also gone nowhere.

Friday, August 22, 2008

The Banana Splits Return to TV

The Banana Splits are returning to the world of pop culture for kids in a big way, beginning on September 2nd when up to 130 1.5-2.5 minute shorts will begin airing on the Cartoon Network and Boomerang. The look of the group has been updated, but the characters remain the same. The property is designed to appeal to kids aged 4 to 7.

The re-launch includes a CD and DVD that will feature 13 new songs, and music videos; a new Website where the shorts can be viewed and the songs can be heard; Banana Splitsville, a live show and play-land at Hard Rock Park; a concert tour and other live appearances; plus a wide range of licensed merchandise including toys, games, books, and apparel.

The original property dates to 1968, when the Banana Splits Adventure Hour, a Hanna-Barbera show on NBC that featured comedy and music videos. The theme song, The Tra La La Song, was one of the most covered songs in the history of contemporary music.

The cross-over between music, TV, and licensing has been the domain of Disney in recent years, with the Cheetah Girls, Hannah Montana, High School Musical, and the Jonas Brothers cranking out success after success. The Banana Splits are aimed younger, however, perhaps in a play to go after territory that Disney doesn’t already dominate.

'Ponyo' Box Office Tops 10 Billion

The newest film by Hayao Miyazaki, Ponyo on the Cliff by the Sea, has topped ¥10 billion in box office receipts in Japan, roughly $93 million. This is the first Japanese film to pass that mark since Miyazaki’s Howl’s Moving Castle, in 2004. Ponyo reached ¥10 billion two days faster than Howl’s.

The film will be shown at the Venice Film Festival next week, and will be released in the U.S. at a time to be announced.

'Stargate: Universe' in 2009

After 'Atlantis' Wraps, DTV Movie

August 22, 2008
Sci Fi Channel has pulled the trigger on Stargate: Universe, the third series in the successful franchise, according to the Hollywood Reporter. The new series, which has been in development for some time (see “Third Stargate Series in Development”), will kick off with a two hour movie early next year, with the regular series premiering in the summer.

The producers of the first two Stargate series, Brad Wright and Robert Cooper, are also producing Universe. The storyline follows a team of explorers who end up on an ancient unmanned spaceship which takes them on a preprogrammed mission through space, and as such, will have more space-based action than the other two series. The producers are planning to look for a cast with a younger appeal, to introduce Stargate to a new audience.

Sci Fi Channel has announced that the current season of Stargate Atlantis, its fifth (see “Stargate Atlantis Renewed”) will be the last, and will be followed by a two hour movie in January 2009. The film will be shown on the Sci Fi Channel before being released on DVD.

Sci Fi has released two Stargate DTV movies, Ark of Truth and Continuum. Stargate Continuum, just released on DVD, was the third best selling DVD in America its first week of release (ssee “Stargate Continuum Solid on DVD”).

Stargate SG-1, the first series, ran 10 seasons on Showtime and Sci Fi; Stargate Atlantis will have run five years on Sci Fi Channel.

Hugo Award for Graphic Novels

August 22, 2008

The World Science Fiction Society, which sponsors the Hugo Awards (and the annual World Science Fiction Convention), has added a category for Best Graphic Story to the awards. “Any science fiction or fantasy story told in graphic form appearing for the first time in the previous calendar year” will be eligible. The new award will have to be ratified in 2009 to take effect.

In the meantime, the organizer of the 2009 convention in Montreal has added the category to the Hugo Awards for next year (under an authority given to the local organizer, so there will be a Hugo Award for Best Graphic Story in 2009.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

ADV, Geneon Worth $7-$10 Million to FUNimation Sales

ADV, Geneon Worth $7-$10 Million
To FUNimation Sales

Navarre expects FUNimation’s sales from the ADV and Geneon titles it recently acquired (see “FUNimation Snags Sojitz Titles” and “FUNimation to Distribute Select Geneon Titles”) to account for around $7 to $10 million in annual sales. Accounting for the wholesale discounts at which it sells, retail sales of the titles in the two sets of acquisitions are expected to total $15 to $20 million per year. The company expects those acquisitions to help drive FUNimation’s sales upward by double digit percentages in the coming year.

FUNimation’s sales of Afro Samurai last year accounted for about $4.5 million at wholesale, or about $9 million retail, according to numbers revealed in the call.

Friday, July 25, 2008

DC Orders 200,000 'Watchmen'

Response to Trailer 'Off the Charts'July 24, 2008

ICv2 has learned that, based on the overwhelming response to the Watchmen movie trailer accompanying The Dark Knight, DC Comics has ordered a huge new printing of 200,000 copies of Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’ Watchmen graphic novel. A DC spokesperson told ICv2 that after the movie trailer hit DC was receiving huge orders for the Watchmen graphic novel from every channel.

Even before the Watchmen movie trailer hit the Watchmen graphic novel was already the top-selling American graphic novel in the bookstore market thus far in 2008. In the wake of the launch of the movie trailer Watchmen trade shot up to #5 on Amazon.

Afro Samurai Sequel -- A Movie

Lucy Liu, Mark Hamill Join Cast
July 24, 2008

Manga Vol. 1The Spike TV network has announced that in January of 2009 it will air Afro Samurai: Resurrection, an animated feature length movie sequel to the Afro Samurai anime miniseries that was one of the bestselling anime DVDs of 2007. Afro Samurai: Resurrection, like its predecessor was produced by Gonzo, one of Japan’s leading anime studios. Once again Samuel L. Jackson, who also functioned as an executive producer on the project, reprises his role as the title character and hip hop artist RZA (Wu-Tang Clan) provides the soundtrack. Lucy Liu joins the vocal cast as Sio, a seductive and sadistic mastermind plotting to destroy Afro Samurai, while Mark Hamill will voice the role of Bin, Sio’s servant and protector. A trailer for Afro Samurai: Resurrection will debut at Comic-Con and will be available for viewing on afrosamurai.com starting at 8:15 pm (ET) on Thursday July 24th.

FUNimation Entertainment, which co-produced Afro Samurai: Resurrection with Gonzo, will once again have the home entertainment (DVD, etc.) rights, though no debut date for the disc, which is sure to be one of the bestselling anime DVDs of 2008, has been set yet.

The Afro Samurai miniseries and Afro Samurai: Resurrection are based on the original Afro Samurai manga by Takashi Okazaki, which Tor/Seven Seas is releasing in North America on September 2nd, 2008.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Live-Action Cowboy Bebop Film in Development at Fox

The IFMagazine.com entertainment website reports that film producer Erwin Stoff (The Matrix, A Scanner Darkly) is developing a live-action adaptation of Sunrise's Cowboy Bebop multi-genre action anime series for Fox. Stoff told the website that the project is "in the really early stages" since the parties "just signed it the other day." Shinichiro Watanabe's original anime follows the motley crew of the spaceship Bebop as it travels throughout the solar system in search of the next job. Stoff promised "a real degree of faithfulness," and added, “When I met with them in Japan, one of the first things that I brought up was the experience that we had on A Scanner Darkly, and how hard we worked to remain faithful to Philip K. Dick, and that was our big concern here.”

The anime distributor Bandai Entertainment and Cartoon Network's Adult Swim programming block released the original 1998 television series in the United States, and Sony Pictures Home Entertainment released the subsequent 2001 animated movie. The anime was also adapted into two separate manga series, and Tokyopop released both manga series in North America. A Bandai Entertainment representative was unable to publicly comment on this report.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Robert's Anime Cornerstore on "Black Lagoon" DVDs

Geneon Title Pre-Orders Rolling In Steady. Your pre-orders for the Geneon / Funimation re-releases continue to roll in (there are so many!) and we appreciate them! We placed OUR order for them this week, and I'm hoping Funimation will begin shipping them around the first or second week of August. Black Lagoon and Black Lagoon Second Barrage will be the first titles to arrive, and will be followed up a couple of weeks later with Karin and Kyo Kara Maoh! Season II.

Third Black Lagoon Project Confirmed

Here's how you get information in the Anime industry - the wraparound jacket band on Gen Urobuchi's novel adaptation of Rei Hiroe's Black Lagoon adventure manga has confirmed that a third Black Lagoon anime project has been green-lit for production. No release info is currently available but it will probably get on the schedule in Japan in late 2009.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

New "Hero" for the Fall 2008 Season

Ntare Mwine has been added to the cast of NBC's Heroes, playing an African who is artistic and close to many of the original heroes, according to The Hollywood Reporter; his special abilities will be developed throughout his nine-episode arc.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Funimation's First Releases from Geneon Deal Scheduled

Funimation has scheduled the first anime DVD releases from its distribution deal with Geneon Entertainment (USA):

August 19: Black Lagoon season 1, Black Lagoon: The Second Barrage volume 1, Elemental Gelade volume 1

September 2: Karin volumes 1-4, Kyo kara Maoh! season 2's volume 1-7

September 9: Shakugan no Shana series box

September 16: Black Lagoon: The Second Barrage volume 2, Fate/stay night
series box, Hellsing Ultimate volumes 1-4, Rozen Maiden series box

September 23: Kamichu! series box, Paradise Kiss series box

September 30: When They Cry - Higurashi volumes 1-4

Funimation announced at Anime Expo 2008 on Thursday that it had agreed to manufacture, sell, and distribute selected DVD titles from Geneon Entertainment in North America. Geneon Entertainment had ceased in-house distribution of its own titles last September.

Sunday, July 6, 2008

FUNimation to Distribute Select Geneon Titles

Roughly nine months after Geneon announced that it was exiting the American anime market FUNimation Entertainment has struck a deal that will allow it to distribute select Geneon titles in North America. Under terms of the agreement FUNimation has obtained the exclusive rights to the manufacturing, marketing, sales, and distribution of established Geneon titles including Hellsing Ultimate, Ergo Proxy, Black Lagoon, Elemental Gelade, Fate Stay Night, Kamichu, Ninja Vixens, Paradise Kiss, Rozen Maiden, Rozen Maiden Traumend, Shana, Shonen Onmyouji, The Familiar of Zero, The Story of Saiunkoku, When They Cry, and The Law of Ueki.

Among the first titles to be released will be the special edition of Hellsing Ultimate, Black Lagoon: Second Barrage, Karin, Kyo Kara Maoh Season 2, and Lyrical Nanoha.

Today's announcement is a bit of good news for the North American anime market and anime fans. FUNimation’s acquisition of Geneon titles had been rumored since last November (see “Geneon’s Fall a Positive for FUNimation?”) and in February the CEO of FUNimation’s parent company Navarre told industry analysts that FUNimation was in the “very early stages of negotiations” to acquire select Geneon titles (see “FUNimation Interested in Some Geneon Titles”). Those negotiations have obviously borne fruit, and though industry observers expected FUNimation to cherry pick the Geneon catalog, today’s announcement is notable for its rather broad sweep that extends from the obvious (Hellsing Ultimate, Black Lagoon, Ergo Proxy) to the somewhat surprising (The Law of Ueki, The Story of Saiunkoku).

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Heroes Goes Deep In Season 3

Tim Kring, creator and executive producer of NBC's Heroes, told SCI FI Wire that the upcoming third season will take the show and its characters in entirely new directions--including deep into the backstory. "One of the things that this volume is going to do that, I think, is really going to be fun for the audience is that there were very initial sort of primal questions that the show asked," Kring said in an interview at the Saturn Awards in Universal City, Calif., on June 24, where he accepted an award for best television DVD. "Who am I? What's happening to me? How am I connected? Where are these powers coming from? All of those questions get reframed and turned on their head in a very interesting way in this volume." As with the previous two seasons, the third will be divided up into volumes. T

he first is titled "Villains" and will focus on the nature of good and evil, Kring said. "You're going to see a lot of bad guys in this one," Kring said. "The idea, also, is we're playing off the idea of our characters as heroes or villains. So it's really the duality of good and evil. ... We're playing off of this duality of good and evil. All of our characters were given these powers and possess these powers, and at some point it becomes sort of free will and human nature as to what you're going to do with that. And all of us are given the choice to make decisions that lead us down very dark paths or towards heroic ends. And so, literally, every one of our characters gets faced with that dilemma."

Kring also said that the popular villain Sylar (Zachary Quinto) will continue to be an integral part of the show in the third season. Quinto had originally been written out of the last half of the second season due to his shooting schedule on the upcoming Star Trek film. But because of the writers' strike, that part of the story was pushed into the third season, and Sylar was written back in. "Well, we have no plans of saying goodbye to Sylar right now," Kring assured fans. "I mean, that was yet another silver lining for the strike, was Zach Quinto's availability to us in the third volume. I mean, that was a huge thing for us to be able to have him back. As you guys know, he would have disappeared for a large chunk of the second half of season two. And so, for us, it was a big, big deal." The third-season premiere of Heroes is scheduled to air on Sept. 22.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

'Time' Anoints Graphic Novels

'Hollywood's Newest Goldmine'
June 20, 2008

In a major three-page article in the June 30th edition of Time Magazine, Time’s Rebecca Winters Keegan anoints graphic novels “Hollywood’s Newest Goldmine.” Starting from the premise that “graphic novels—long comic books for grownups—have always had mostly cult appeal,” Keegan demonstrates how A-list superheroes such as Spider-Man and the X-Men rescued the comic book film genre from the nadir of Joel Schumacher’s disastrous 1997, nipples-on-the-rubber-batsuit, Batman and Robin and made “Hollywood’s appetite for comics-fueled material insatiable.”

It would be easy to quibble with Keegan’s appropriation of the “toney term” graphic novel for projects that almost universally appeared first as comic books, and it should be noted that over its 20 years in print Watchmen has racked up bestseller rather than cult hit sales numbers—but this article can only be good news and great publicity for the next round of comic-inspired movies including Wanted, whose creator Mark Millar is quoted throughout and whose stars Angelina Jolie and James MacAvoy are featured in a cool comic-inspired illustration, as well as for Hellboy II, The Dark Knight, The Spirit, and Watchmen all of which are discussed at some length.

One cool feature of the article is a sidebar feature in which “four famous comics junkies” pick the graphic novels they would like to see on the big screen. Frank Miller picks Jeff Smith’s Bone, Mark Millar chooses Robert Kirkman’s The Walking Dead, Kevin Smith opts for Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns, and Dark Horse’s Mike Richardson goes for Paul Chadwick’s Concrete.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

An Evening with Preston Bailey - Designer to the Stars

Monday, September 8, 2008
6:00pm-9:00pm
Ticket Price: $88.00
Stardome Comedy Club, Hoover, AL

An Evening with Preston Bailey - Designer to the Stars | 6:00 PM
Dorothy McDaniel's Flower Market presents an evening with the world’s preeminent event designer, Mr. Preston Bailey. Join us for an evening of Hors D'oeuvres and see the latest trends in Floral and Event Design as well as designs that Preston has created for Celebrities. Book signing to follow.

Visions Poll Results Announced

SCI FI Channel's Visions for Tomorrow campaign has announced the results of an online poll to determine the top 10 things to read, watch and do to save the world. The poll asked readers to vote on which science-fiction films, television series and literary works resonate most with them and which positive courses of action they inspire. More than 20,000 votes were cast in each of the four categories.

Topping the lists were Ridley Scott's film Blade Runner, Joss Whedon's television series Firefly and George Orwell's novel 1984.

Reading was identified as the number-one world-changing course of action. To encourage people to read, SCI FI has partnered with Booksfree.com, the largest online paperback and audiobook rental service. A special 20 percent discount will be given to members who sign up for the service from SCI FI's Visions for Tomorrow Web site.

A complete list of the results follows.

Top 10 Films to Watch
1. Blade Runner
2. The Matrix
3. The Terminator
4. 2001: A Space Odyssey
5. Jurassic Park
6. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
7. The Day After Tomorrow
8. The Day the Earth Stood Still
9. Children of Men
10. Armageddon


Top 10 Television Series to Watch
1. Firefly
2. Battlestar Galactica (2004)
3. The X-Files
4. Heroes
5. Stargate: SG-1
6. Doctor Who
7. Star Trek: The Next Generation
8. Babylon 5
9. Star Trek
10. Buffy The Vampire Slayer


Top 10 Books to Read
1. 1984 by George Orwell
2. The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells
3. Dune by Frank Herbert
4. The Time Machine by H.G. Wells
5. I, Robot by Isaac Asimov
6. The Stand by Stephen King
7. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
8. 2001: A Space Odyssey by Arthur C. Clarke
9. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
10. The Andromeda Strain by Michael Crichton

Top 10 Things to Do
1. Read.
2. Recycle.
3. Register to vote. Cast your ballot in November.
4. Eat healthier.
5. Be kind.
6. Empower children and yourself through education.
7. Protect wildlife.
8. Conserve energy by switching to compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs).
9. Plant a tree and print less paper.
10. Give blood.

Saturday, June 14, 2008

Freelancers Report that PiQ's July Issue Is Its Last

Freelance writers are reporting that PiQ magazine editor Kevin Gifford notified them that the magazine's current July issue is the last one. Freelancers will still be compensated for any work they had done for the unpublished August issue. According to the reports, PiQ's editorial staffers have already vacated their office. PIQ has not made a formal, public announcement about its status yet, and PIQ staffers were unavailable for comment.

PIQ began publishing in March after A.D. Vision ceased publication of its Newtype USA magazine. PIQ inherited much of Newtype USA's editorial staff, stable of freelance writers, and list of subscribers. However, PiQ differentiated itself by expanding its focus beyond Newtype USA's anime/manga coverage to popular culture in general. It also offered Newtype USA subscribers two issues for every remaining issue of Newtype USA still owed on their subscriptions. The July issue is PIQ's fourth issue.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Capra Coming To Heroes

Francis Capra (Veronica Mars) is joining the NBC hit Heroes this fall in a recurring role, TV Guide reported. Capra will play Jesse, a mysterious character who turns out to be evil. The character's villainous storyline will find him crossing paths with Peter Petrelli (Milo Ventimiglia), the site reported.

Capra's appearance may reunite him with fellow Veronica Mars star Kristen Bell, who is rumored to be reprising her previous Heroes role as electric girl Elle Bishop in the upcoming second season.

"Happening" Needed R Rating

M. Night Shyamalan, writer-director of the upcoming paranoid thriller The Happening, told reporters that there was no way around its R rating. In the film, an unexplained event compels people to commit suicide in often grisly ways. Mark Wahlberg, Zooey Deschanel, John Leguizamo and Ashlyn Sanchez star as a quartet of Philadelphians trying to stay one step ahead of the deadly threat, which could be man-made, a force of nature or the result of an accident.

"I got an R on two other movies, on The Sixth Sense and The Village," Shyamalan said during a press conference in New York on June 9. "I got an R initially, for the intensity of certain scenes, and I needed to pull back a sound effect. We were right on the line, and I could always just pull back a sound effect and re-submit it, and they'd go, 'Oh, it's much better.' And all I did was take out some sound effects. It's always the impact; what you emotionally feel is different than what I actually showed." But on The Happening, Shyamalan couldn't dodge the R.

"The screenplay that I wrote, there was just no way to do it any other way," he said. "One of the movies I was thinking about was Pan's Labyrinth. I was thinking about that a lot when I made the decision, because I didn't want to make it as an agenda. You want to make an organic decision about: What does the material want to do? And when I thought about Pan's Labyrinth, which had visceral moments of violence juxtaposed against the softer kind of things that are going on against the canvas; it gave it authority and some teeth."

Shyamalan added that a PG-13 version of Guillermo del Toro's Pan would not have worked as well. "It wouldn't have stayed with me the way that movie has stayed with me," he said. "And so [on The Happening] it felt like the right balance of things. It was exciting, and it was disturbingly easy to shoot all those scenes. I had such a fun time." The Happening opens June 13.

Monday, June 9, 2008

2009 Assorted Movie News

ComingSoon.net cited an interview with Terrence Howard at Military.com in which he revealed that he will begin filming Iron Man 2 in March of 2009.

Dan Mazeau is the latest screenwriter to be hired to work on an untitled Jake Gyllenhaal action film about lunar colonization. Director Doug Liman wrote the original screenplay with John Hamburg, and it was later revamped by Black Hawk Down author Mark Bowden.

CHUD.com confirmed fan speculation that Michael Bay's upcoming sequel Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen will draw on the mythology of the Transformers comics and the origin of a Lucifer-type character known as the Fallen.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

The Vertigo Encyclopedia

Slickly produced and highly informative books about comics such as DK Publishing’s The Marvel Encyclopedia have sold extremely well in both the bookstore and direct markets and, given the devoted following that DC’s Vertigo imprint has developed, DK’s The Vertigo Encyclopedia is likely to follow suit. The 240-page, full color hardcover edition of The Vertigo Encyclopedia ($30) by Alex Irvine is due out in September and will clearly be one of the top holiday books of 2008.

The Vertigo Encyclopedia includes comprehensive entries for all the key Vertigo properties including The Sandman, Preacher, Hellblazer, 100 Bullets, DMZ, Swamp Thing—and the two series that are currently burning it up in both the comic shops and the bookstores, Bill Willingham’s Fables and Brian K.

Vaughn’s Y: The Last Man--as well as 72 additional Vertigo delights that will all receive the in-depth treatment (120 other lesser-known Vertigo releases are covered in an “A to Z Gazetteer” section). The in-depth entries include an overview of the series, profiles of the creators involved, storyline summaries, creation notes, illustrated profiles of all the major characters, collections of outstanding moments, plus lists of all trade paperbacks and spin-offs associated with the property.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Wilson Has Transformers 2 Role

Rainn Wilson (NBC's The Office) told MTV that he has been cast in DreamWorks' Transformers 2, the sequel to last year's megahit about a race of automotive automatons, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The sequel reteams director Michael Bay with returning stars Shia LaBeouf, Megan Fox, Josh Duhamel, Tyrese Gibson and John Turturro.

Wilson will reportedly have a small role in the sequel as a college professor to LaBeouf's new undergraduate. Discussions with Jonah Hill to take another small role did not pan out. The story was conceived by Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci, who wrote the first movie, as well as Ehren Kruger, who wrote the screenplay.

Filming began in Los Angeles in recent weeks and is moving to Pennsylvania and then overseas.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

"Heroes" News

NBC announced that it will bring back Heroes on Sept. 22 with a one-hour clip show at 8 p.m. ET/PT and a two-hour season premiere at 9, Variety reported; Chuck, meanwhile, returns for a second season on Sept. 29 at 8 p.m., and Knight Rider debuts at 8 p.m. on Sept. 24.

Monday, May 12, 2008

Witchblade Movie in Development!

Platinum Studios, Top Cow Productions and Arclight Films will team on a live-action feature adaptation of Witchblade, based on the Top Cow comic-book franchise, Variety reported. The comic book introduced the Witchblade mythology, which centers on an ornate jewel-encrusted gauntlet that gives extraordinary powers to the wearer, a specially chosen female from each generation.

The comic-book franchise has sold more than 100 million copies worldwide since debuting in 1995. It spawned a 2000 telefilm that turned into a weekly series that ran for two seasons on TNT, starring Yancy Butler. Witchblade has been published in more than 21 languages and 55 countries. The most recent incarnation was an anime TV show in Japan by Gonzo Digimation in 2006. The companies are already eyeing a location shoot in Australia.

Friday, May 9, 2008

"Geneon" news from Robert's Anime Store

I'm still getting a half dozen e-mails each week from folks wondering when Geneon's old titles will be back on the market. Anime fans are consummate optimists. :-) I actually do have an update of sorts, and I have not mentioned anything up until now because I didn't want to get anyone's hopes up - but what the heck, here goes. Geneon has been in serious talks with a major US home entertainment distributor for about the past three months to get their titles back on the street. I know exactly who it is, how far along they are, and the details that are going to make or break the deal.

The trouble is I can't make any of that info public without jeopardizing our
relationship with the new company, but perhaps it's helpful to let you guys know that there is something serious in the works. Whether the deal is completed or not remains to be seen, and I would advise everyone to not get their hopes up, but I will tell you this:

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If we don't hear anything by mid-summer we probably won't hear anything.
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Even if a major deal is struck, it won't involve Geneon's entire catalog circa Sept007. The new company will cherry pick those releases like people at Ruby Tuesday pick over the salad bar.
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The 'major distributor' they are in talks with is NOT one of the existing US Anime studios. Please don't e-mail me scoping for more details, or to ask if this title or that title will be re-released soon. I don't know, and if I did, I couldn't tell you at this point anyway. If a big announcement comes through in the next few weeks, just remember you read about it here first. If it doesn't, well heck people, even space flight is 'possible'... -_^

New "Andromeda Strain" Beefed Up!

Andre Braugher, who plays the nefarious Gen. George Mancheck in A&E's upcoming SF miniseries The Andromeda Strain, told SCI FI Wire that the show goes well beyond the original Michael Crichton book and 1971 movie version. "It's very anticlimactic, the book and the film," Braugher (Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer) said in an interview at the miniseries' Hollywood premiere on May 7. He added: "You've got the Andromeda; it's suddenly somehow benign, but then you've got a reactor thing, you know? ... But that movie wouldn't have held up today, you know what I mean? So it had to be re-imagined.

" The premise remains the same: A satellite falls from the sky, and most of the townspeople of a small Utah hamlet die suddenly. A group of top scientists, led by Dr. Jeremy Stone (Benjamin Bratt), race time in the top-secret underground lab called Wildfire to uncover the mystery of the deaths before the cause--a contagious agent called Andromeda--can spread. Writer Robert Shenkkan has updated and expanded the story well beyond the parameters of the original 1969 book and Robert Wise's movie, taking a lot of the story outside Wildfire and boosting the action elements. "I think our screenwriter and [director] Mikael [Salomon] together have done a really wonderful job bringing that together," Braugher said. The movie also adds environmental, political and military storylines.

"Some of the themes that were added today just were not there," Braugher said. "I mean, the whole idea about the vent mining and the use of resources today in a cavalier manner that will become useful to us, you know, sometime in the future? That cautionary tale is entirely inserted. ... It's quite timely for now. We happen to be in the middle of using up and exploiting all of our resources, you know?" The four-hour miniseries also brings the investigation of an infectious disease into the 21st century, though it was a novelty in storytelling in the '60s. "[Audiences have] become very used to the idea of infectious and biological weapons and stuff," Braugher said. "And things traveling around the globe. I mean, the world just happens to be a little bit smaller today than it was in 1968, when Crichton wrote the book.

" The Andromeda Strain, which also stars Eric McCormack, Ricky Schroder, Daniel Dae Kim, Christa Miller and Viola Davis, premieres May 26 at 9 p.m. ET/PT and continues May 27 at the same time.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Twilight/Heroes News

A teaser trailer has gone live on MySpace.com for Twilight, the upcoming film version of Stephenie Meyer's best-selling book, which opens in December.

TV Guide Online's Michael Ausiello reported a rumor that Brea Grant (Friday Night Lights) will join the cast of NBC's Heroes next season as the Speedster.