| First Trailer For ‘Harry Potter’ Spinoff ‘Fantastic Beasts’
Warner Brothers Pictures has released the first trailer for Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, the spinoff prequel to their juggernaut Harry Potter movie franchise. The new movie is set 70 years before the events of Harry Potter, and follows a magizoologist (someone who studies and catalogs the various magical creatures of the wizarding world) named Newt Scamander (played by Academy Award winner and likely upcoming Academy Award nominee Eddie Redmayne) who visits New York with a briefcase full of magical creatures, some of which end up escaping. Scamander is the author of the textbook of the same name, which would one day be studied by the students of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, including none other than Harry Potter himself. You can check out the first trailer for Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them below.
...continue reading » Tags: Alison Sudol, Carmen Ejogo, Christine Marzano, Colin Farrell, Dan Fogler, David Yates, Denis Khoroshko, Eddie Redmayne, Elizabeth Moynihan, Ezra Miller, Faith Wood-Blagrove, Fantastic Beasts, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Gemma Chan, J.K. Rowling, Jenn Murray, Jon Voight, Katherine Waterston, Ron Perlman, Samantha Morton, Warner Brothers | |
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| First Look At Harry Potter Prequel ‘Fantastic Beasts’
Yesterday saw the reveal of the title card for Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, the highly anticipated prequel to the Harry Potter films (see image at top). Now comes the official first look at the film in its headlining star Eddie Redmayne on the cover of the new issue of Entertainment Weekly magazine. Check out the first look at Redmayne in the image gallery here below!
...continue reading » Tags: Alison Sudol, Carmen Ejogo, Christine Marzano, Colin Farrell, Dan Fogler, David Yates, Denis Khoroshko, Eddie Redmayne, Elizabeth Moynihan, Ezra Miller, Faith Wood-Blagrove, Fantastic Beasts, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Gemma Chan, Harry Potter, Jenn Murray, JK Rowling, Jon Voight, Katherine Waterston, Ron Perlman, Samantha Morton | |
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| Ron Perlman Becomes A Goblin In ‘Harry Potter’ Spinoff ‘Fantastic Beasts’
Production is currently underway for the first Harry Potter spinoff Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them. Set 70s years before the events of Harry Potter, in the 1920s, Eddie Redmayne stars as Newt Scamander, the wizarding magizoologist who is in New York documenting numerous magical creatures. His discoveries would eventually become “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,” a textbook that would be used as required reading in the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Now, the spinoff has just added Ron Perlman (Hellboy, Sons of Anarchy) to the cast as a goblin. More on the role in the report below.
...continue reading » Tags: Alison Sudol, Carmen Ejogo, Daokta Fanning, David Yates, Eddie Redmayne, Ezra Miller, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Gemma Chan, J.K. Rowling, Jon Voight, Katherine Waterson, Lili Simmons, Ron Perlman, Saoirse Ronan, Warner Brothers | |
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| Disney In Depth: 10 Reasons To Revisit ‘National Treasure’
The surprise hit of the 2004 holiday season, National Treasure, Disney’s Jerry Bruckehimer production once destined as a Touchstone Pictures release, became an international sensation. Grossing nearly $350 million worldwide, inspiring a book series and sequel film, and re-launching Nicolas Cage‘s stardom, Treasure‘s name could not be more fitting. How fast a decade goes by. National Treasure turns one decade old this November. That’s reason enough to determine 10 reasons to revisit the film.
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| ‘The Wild Bunch’ and ‘Midnight Cowboy’ Turn 45 This Year
Two landmark motion pictures have hit the 45th anniversary milestone this year, and both of them were instrumental in helping usher in the kind of norms, sensibilities, and somewhat radical attitudes that were beginning to burgeon in Tinseltown as the 1960s gave way to the 1970s. One of them, The Wild Bunch, took screen violence and the western narrative to an entirely different level; the other, Midnight Cowboy, not only became the first X-rated motion picture to win Best Picture at the Academy Awards, but it also exemplified a kind of realistic film in which the narrative doused its characters in strife, pain, and struggle, and didn’t offer a seamless resolution at its denouement, but rather the contrary. Its kind of downer tale also became a style and staple for many of the films which followed it into the mid 1970s such as Scarecrow, The Last Detail, etc.
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