Some additional information has surfaced regarding director Neil Marshall's Hellboy reboot. That info involves some of the characters that we'll reportedly see in the movie. These characters are on top of David Harbour's Hellboy, Ian McShane's Professor Broom, and Milla Jovovich as the Blood Queen, who is the main villain.
We recently learned from creator Mike Mignola that the Bureau for Paranormal Research and Defense (B.P.R.D.) would play a part in this new movie but that it would put the main focus on the title character. There are several members of the B.P.R.D. team, and Splash Report reveals the team members who will be involved with this new reboot. Here are the details that their inside source offered them:
You will see the B.P.R.D. Headquarters, which is on a snow-capped mountainside, you will see arcane artifacts: cryptid skeletons,...
We recently learned from creator Mike Mignola that the Bureau for Paranormal Research and Defense (B.P.R.D.) would play a part in this new movie but that it would put the main focus on the title character. There are several members of the B.P.R.D. team, and Splash Report reveals the team members who will be involved with this new reboot. Here are the details that their inside source offered them:
You will see the B.P.R.D. Headquarters, which is on a snow-capped mountainside, you will see arcane artifacts: cryptid skeletons,...
- 8/15/2017
- by Joey Paur
- GeekTyrant
This week, Mubi is pleased to exclusively present in the United States a quartet of new restorations and high definition digital scans from two of cinemas great animations luminaries: the Brothers Quay. Starting July 26, we'll be showing Rehearsals for Extinct Anatomies (1987), The Comb (1990), Anamorphosis (1991), and In Absentia (2000).We're fans, but we're not alone: the Quays' on-the-record admirers include filmmakers from Terry Gilliam to Christopher Nolan to The Duke of Burgundy's Peter Strickland. We reached out to Duke Johnson, the Oscar-nominated animator and co-director (with Charlie Kaufman) of Anomalisa, who spoke to us at Cinefamily in Los Angeles to discuss the Quays' enduring appeal.Asked about animation's place in contemporary cinema, Johnson said, "I see contemporary cinema as animated, for the most part. Our mainstream films, like Transformers or The Avengers are seemingly primarily animated films. They have live action actors, but they often times have just as many animated characters as well.
- 7/29/2016
- MUBI
With a seemingly endless amount of streaming options — not only the titles at our disposal, but services themselves — we’ve taken it upon ourselves to highlight the titles that have recently hit the interwebs. Every week, one will be able to see the cream of the crop (or perhaps some simply interesting picks) of streaming titles (new and old) across platforms such as Netflix, iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, and more (note: U.S. only). Check out our rundown for this week’s selections below.
Born to Be Blue (Robert Budreau)
I played jazz trumpet growing up in Oklahoma, so Chet Baker’s somber swing always brought our ensemble back to earth when Dizzy Gillespie’s flying fingers sent us noodling in quick cacophony. We thought Baker was the romantic trumpeter, the kind you’d play when you wanted to impress a date — and whose pretty-boy face on the album cover...
Born to Be Blue (Robert Budreau)
I played jazz trumpet growing up in Oklahoma, so Chet Baker’s somber swing always brought our ensemble back to earth when Dizzy Gillespie’s flying fingers sent us noodling in quick cacophony. We thought Baker was the romantic trumpeter, the kind you’d play when you wanted to impress a date — and whose pretty-boy face on the album cover...
- 7/29/2016
- by The Film Stage
- The Film Stage
Mubi is presenting the Brothers Quay, a 4-film program playing in the United States July and August 2016, featuring new restorations of Anamorphosis (1991) and Rehearsals for Extinct Anatomies (1987) and brand new 2k and 4k scans of The Comb (1990) and In Absentia (2000). In Absentia (2000) presents a demon in color. The creature is horned, hooved balsa wood, its room lit by a calm sun. It waves its hoof over a pile of black dust to recombine it into graphite nibs. Somewhere above, below, on the material plane, or possibly in a parallel reality, a woman scribbles in soft black and white, breaking pencils over and over. She presses the little lead bullets into a pile of dirt on her windowsill, like a garden or graveyard—an offering or a sacrifice. In her world, light pulses and skitters, glides and ricochets, sometimes across walls and sometimes across invisible planes. The sun forms impossible palimpsests in her room,...
- 7/26/2016
- MUBI
From July 26th through the 29th, the online streaming service Mubi will present the exclusive online premiere in HD of new restorations and digital scans of four painstakingly animated wonders from the groundbreaking stop-motion filmmakers, The Brothers Quay.
Read More: Discover the Brothers Quay, Identical Twin Animators Who Inspired Christopher Nolan, on New Blu-Ray
These four films and their synopses are as follows:
“Rehearsals For Extinct Anatomies” (7/26): Oscillating hands each hold a pen; a man made of wire has a malevolent look and an oscillating eye as he pokes at a bump on his forehead. Op-art stripes are in the fabric. Lines become jumbles that become balls that oscillate, bounce, or stay suspended in air. “The Combs” (7/27): A woman dreams of a fairytale landscape populated by ladders and sinister puppets. “Anamorphosis” (7/28): An exploration of the optical phenomenon of anamorphosis, whereby the eye can perceive images differently if viewed at an appropriate angle.
Read More: Discover the Brothers Quay, Identical Twin Animators Who Inspired Christopher Nolan, on New Blu-Ray
These four films and their synopses are as follows:
“Rehearsals For Extinct Anatomies” (7/26): Oscillating hands each hold a pen; a man made of wire has a malevolent look and an oscillating eye as he pokes at a bump on his forehead. Op-art stripes are in the fabric. Lines become jumbles that become balls that oscillate, bounce, or stay suspended in air. “The Combs” (7/27): A woman dreams of a fairytale landscape populated by ladders and sinister puppets. “Anamorphosis” (7/28): An exploration of the optical phenomenon of anamorphosis, whereby the eye can perceive images differently if viewed at an appropriate angle.
- 7/25/2016
- by Vikram Murthi
- Indiewire
The Quay Brothers In 35Mm screens this Friday, Saturday, and Sunday (April 22nd. 23rd, and 24th) at Webster University’s Moore Auditorium (470 E. Lockwood, Webster Groves, Mo 63119). The program begins each evening at 7:30.
Christopher Nolan has launched some of the most ambitious blockbusters of the past decade including Inception, Interstellar and his Batman trilogy. The filmmaker’s newest project has nothing to do with his own films. Screening this weekend at Webster University, The Quay Brothers In 35mm is a dazzling collection of experimental shorts from identical twin stop-motion animators Stephen and Timothy Quay. Curated by Nolan himself, and including his new eight-minute short film, Quay, the program finds Nolan using his international recognition to shine a spotlight on two of the most visionary animators working in cinema today.
The program consists of Nolan’s 8-minute documentary about the Quays and three shorts by the Brothers Quay:
In Absentia...
Christopher Nolan has launched some of the most ambitious blockbusters of the past decade including Inception, Interstellar and his Batman trilogy. The filmmaker’s newest project has nothing to do with his own films. Screening this weekend at Webster University, The Quay Brothers In 35mm is a dazzling collection of experimental shorts from identical twin stop-motion animators Stephen and Timothy Quay. Curated by Nolan himself, and including his new eight-minute short film, Quay, the program finds Nolan using his international recognition to shine a spotlight on two of the most visionary animators working in cinema today.
The program consists of Nolan’s 8-minute documentary about the Quays and three shorts by the Brothers Quay:
In Absentia...
- 4/19/2016
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Those prone to mental disturbances and nightmares, or possess a fear of dolls, dirt or general unpleasantries would do well to avoid the Brothers Quay and the bulk of their unconscious unfurling oeuvre, but everyone else is due a hearty recommendation. Take it from Christopher Nolan, who recently wrapped a documentary, simply titled Quay, on the mysterious identical twin directors and curated a selection of 35mm prints of their work to hit the road on a new theatrical tour. Like so many others, Nolan caught a stray Quay film on British cable by accident, and unable to catch the names of its creators through the swirl of credits in beautifully stylized calligraphy, was haunted by its alluring, impenetrable imagery.
From their minutely detailed and grittily textured beginnings in the early ’80s with films like The Cabinet of Jan Svankmajer, in which a professor literally empties the head of his student,...
From their minutely detailed and grittily textured beginnings in the early ’80s with films like The Cabinet of Jan Svankmajer, in which a professor literally empties the head of his student,...
- 12/15/2015
- by Jordan M. Smith
- IONCINEMA.com
There are few names in the film world that mass audiences both recognize and give some sort of connotation to. Martin Scorsese. Steven Spielberg. Michael Bay. All of these names are not only recognizable to just about 100% of any particular audience entering a cinema, but instantly bring to mind the type of picture one would expect to see come from them. However, not all filmmakers have the pleasure of being the world-changing, name brand cinematic legends that few like the men named within this paragraph are, despite deserving that (and so very much more). So, in turn, some curation may be needed as not only an introduction to a singular cinematic universe, but also a perfect entry point into a world that cinephiles may not have been introduced to.
That’s what makes the work that Zeitgeist Films, Syncopy and beloved filmmaker Christopher Nolan have done with regards to their...
That’s what makes the work that Zeitgeist Films, Syncopy and beloved filmmaker Christopher Nolan have done with regards to their...
- 12/2/2015
- by Joshua Brunsting
- CriterionCast
The Quay Brothers, or The Brothers Quay as they were introduced to me, have been working in stop-motion for over 3 decades yet most horror fans do not know of them. This could mainly be because their work is in the short film format which is hard to gain a audience outside of film festival circuits. Some light was brought onto them when they made the cover for the Canadian horror magazine, Rue Morgue, back in November of 2005 – along with other stop-motion artists like Robert Morgan (The Separation from ABCs of Death 2) and Jan Svankmajer. Earlier this year, director Christopher Nolan took on the project of compiling some of the shorts from The Quay Brothers over their 30 years of filmmaking in addition to Nolan’s short documentary on the brothers. If you weren’t lucky enough to see this collection, which was only exhibited via 35mm, the good news is that...
- 10/27/2015
- by Andy Triefenbach
- Destroy the Brain
Wednesday night at New York City's Film Forum, Christopher Nolan premiered his new short documentary about the Brothers Quay — a pair of legendary experimental animators — and afterward took the stage with them to discuss their work. The occasion was opening night of a touring 35mm program of Brothers Quay films, which was curated by Nolan and will be at Film Forum through Tuesday. It features three of the Quays’ best-known shorts — 2000’s Karlheinz Stockhausen–scored reverie of madness In Absentia, the playfully degenerate 1990 film Comb, and the noirish nightmare Street of Crocodiles (1986), possibly their masterpiece.Nolan’s film, simply titled Quay, makes no attempts to replicate the animators’ much-imitated style. Instead, it shows Timothy and Stephen Quay — identical twins, in case you were wondering — at their studio in England, discussing their craft. As anyone who has seen even a minute of their footage can tell you, the...
- 8/21/2015
- by Bilge Ebiri
- Vulture
The sci-fi director’s new documentary investigates the animator Quay twins. Here, they reveal how British weather, maths and lizards help to create their films
“So, on that last one. What was your inspiration?” By the third time the moderator uses this generic, parody-of-a-bad-interview question, one could only smile.
This is no ordinary Q&A. This is a session with a man, usually hammered by fanboy-ish questions, getting a chance to do a little geeking out. Christopher Nolan, director of Memento, The Prestige, Inception, Interstellar and the Dark Knight Trilogy is using some of his considerable industry clout to promote a programme of newly scrubbed-up 35mm short films by stop-motion animators the Brothers Quay. In addition to In Absentia (2000), The Comb (1991) and Street of Crocodiles (1986), the collection includes Quay, an eight-minute mini-documentary of the brothers in their cramped, magical London studio filled with decaying doll parts, screws, wigs chewed by bugs and old cameras.
“So, on that last one. What was your inspiration?” By the third time the moderator uses this generic, parody-of-a-bad-interview question, one could only smile.
This is no ordinary Q&A. This is a session with a man, usually hammered by fanboy-ish questions, getting a chance to do a little geeking out. Christopher Nolan, director of Memento, The Prestige, Inception, Interstellar and the Dark Knight Trilogy is using some of his considerable industry clout to promote a programme of newly scrubbed-up 35mm short films by stop-motion animators the Brothers Quay. In addition to In Absentia (2000), The Comb (1991) and Street of Crocodiles (1986), the collection includes Quay, an eight-minute mini-documentary of the brothers in their cramped, magical London studio filled with decaying doll parts, screws, wigs chewed by bugs and old cameras.
- 8/20/2015
- by Jordan Hoffman
- The Guardian - Film News
It’s a cliche to say that there aren’t many filmmakers quite like insert-director’s name, but in the case of the American identical directing duo known as the Quay Brothers, there truly isn’t another voice in the world of cinema that is quite like theirs.
For over 30 years, the pair of Pennsylvania-born filmmakers have been turning out some of cinema’s most original and breathtakingly unforgettable feature films, mixing a love for Eastern European literature with an equally deep affinity for puppetry and stop motion animation. Marked by a dark sense of humor and an assured hand in mixing live action and animation, the Brothers Quay have, with films like The Piano Tuner Of Earthquakes, become some of the most interesting names in the world of film, genre be damned.
However, as the medium of short film becomes more and more widespread and well regarded, a new...
For over 30 years, the pair of Pennsylvania-born filmmakers have been turning out some of cinema’s most original and breathtakingly unforgettable feature films, mixing a love for Eastern European literature with an equally deep affinity for puppetry and stop motion animation. Marked by a dark sense of humor and an assured hand in mixing live action and animation, the Brothers Quay have, with films like The Piano Tuner Of Earthquakes, become some of the most interesting names in the world of film, genre be damned.
However, as the medium of short film becomes more and more widespread and well regarded, a new...
- 8/19/2015
- by Joshua Brunsting
- CriterionCast
Massive news today for fans of creepy, old-school animators, The Quay Brothers, who've influenced at least one whole generation of other creepy filmmakers and storytellers, including Christoper Nolan.Partnering with Zeitgeist Films and Syncopy, Nolan and the Quays are embarking on a Us tour of select Quay Brothers' films entitled The Quay Brothers in 35mm. Featuring Street of Crocodiles, The Comb, and In Absentia, the films are curated by Nolan, and this tour includes his new short film, Quay, "about the inner workings of the London-based animators' studio." Audiences will be treated to "a 70-minute program featuring stunning new 35mm prints of three short films by Stephen and Timothy Quay, alongside the world premiere of Christopher Nolan's short film Quay, will make its debut in a...
[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]...
[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]...
- 8/12/2015
- Screen Anarchy
For anyone who is eager for a new Christopher Nolan project, your need may just be satiated. It was announced last month that Nolan’s short documentary about the Quay brothers was complete and would be featured in an 11-city theatrical tour, entitled The Quay Brothers in 35mm, that Nolan curated. And the trailer for the tour has been released, and it looks like it’s going to be a creepy good time.
Now not everyone may be familiar with brothers Timothy and Stephen Quay, two American animators who have been creating stop motion films since the 80s. By the looks of the trailer, the works of the Quay brothers are haunting and riveting creations that deserve to be celebrated. Their films that will be featured in this tour are In Absentia (2000), The Comb (1991), and Streets of Crocodiles (1986), along with Nolan’s short documentary titled Quay. For more information on the tour,...
Now not everyone may be familiar with brothers Timothy and Stephen Quay, two American animators who have been creating stop motion films since the 80s. By the looks of the trailer, the works of the Quay brothers are haunting and riveting creations that deserve to be celebrated. Their films that will be featured in this tour are In Absentia (2000), The Comb (1991), and Streets of Crocodiles (1986), along with Nolan’s short documentary titled Quay. For more information on the tour,...
- 8/12/2015
- by Sarah Pearce Lord
- SoundOnSight
Christopher Nolan surprised pretty much all of us last month when we found out his next project was already completed, though as a short documentary about stop-motion animators Stephen and Timothy Quay it is less notable than, say, a full-fledged feature film followup to last year's sci-fi epic Interstellar. No matter, while Nolan continues developing his next feature, a trailer for The Quay Brothers in 35mm has debuted, teasing a presentation of three of the Quays' short films and Nolan's documentary Quay, which you can check out below. The Quay Brothers in 35mm includes a 70-minute program featuring new 35mm prints of In Absentia, The Comb and Street of Crocodiles and a presentation of Nolan's short, which takes a look at the inner workings of the Quay brothers' studio. The program will make a one week run in New York and then expand to 10 additional cities ahead of an...
- 8/11/2015
- by Jordan Benesh
- Rope of Silicon
The Quay Brothers: On 35mm, a 70-minute program featuring new prints of three short films by Stephen and Timothy Quay, will debut in a one-week run at New York's Film Forum on August 19. This includes the world premiere of Christopher Nolan's documentary short "Quay," with Nolan and the Quays on-hand to discuss the works. Nolan handpicked "In Absentia" (2000), "The Comb" (1991) and "Street of Crocodiles" (1986) for this program, which will travel to 10 cities (listed below). "Crocodiles," unfolding an eccentric and nightmarish world populated by a melancholy puppet unfettered by his master, was the Brothers' first film to be shot on 35mm. Read More: Discover the Brothers Quay, Identical Twin Animators Who Inspired Christopher Nolan The program, from Zeitgeist Films and Syncopy, travels to Dallas (Alamo Drafthouse Richardson, 9/3-7), La (Cinefamily, 9/4-10 with appearances by Nolan), Houston (Museum of Fine Arts, 9/12-13), Austin...
- 8/10/2015
- by Ryan Lattanzio
- Thompson on Hollywood
The next Christopher Nolan film has been announced - but it's very different from the blockbusters we're used to seeing from him.
Nolan, who has directed movies such as Interstellar and The Dark Knight Rises, will next release a short film about two stop-motion animators.
Titled Quay, the documentary centres on Stephen and Timothy Quay, as viewers will get an insight into the "inner workings of the brothers' studio".
It will be shown alongside three films the Quays worked on - In Absentia (2000), The Comb (1991) and Street of Crocodiles (1986) - at the Film Forum in New York City on August 19.
Following the screening, Nolan and the Quay brothers will participate in a Q&A session.
Nolan's previous works also include Inception, The Prestige and Memento.
Find out the behind-the-scenes secrets of Christopher Nolan's Interstellar in the video below:...
Nolan, who has directed movies such as Interstellar and The Dark Knight Rises, will next release a short film about two stop-motion animators.
Titled Quay, the documentary centres on Stephen and Timothy Quay, as viewers will get an insight into the "inner workings of the brothers' studio".
It will be shown alongside three films the Quays worked on - In Absentia (2000), The Comb (1991) and Street of Crocodiles (1986) - at the Film Forum in New York City on August 19.
Following the screening, Nolan and the Quay brothers will participate in a Q&A session.
Nolan's previous works also include Inception, The Prestige and Memento.
Find out the behind-the-scenes secrets of Christopher Nolan's Interstellar in the video below:...
- 7/28/2015
- Digital Spy
Another new Christopher Nolan film already?! Yes indeed. But it's not what you're thinking. Thanks to a tip from The Film Stage, NYC's Film Forum venue has announced a special screening series coming up this August. They'll be showing three of the stop-motion animated shorts from American filmmakers Stephen and Timothy Quay, known as the Quay Brothers, as well as the new short film from Christopher Nolan about the brothers. Titled just Quay, Film Forum will be hosting the world premiere of the documentary, shot on 35mm, profiling the brothers and their animation work. This is the first we've heard of the doc at all. Here is the event info direct from NYC's Film Forum - where you can buy tickets and find more details. The Quay Brothers – On 35Mm All New 35Mm Prints! Curated by Christopher Nolan Including: In Absentia The Comb Street Of Crocodiles and the World Premiere...
- 7/27/2015
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
After Christopher Nolan’s sci-fi blockbuster Interstellar divided critics, the director went quiet as to his next movie, but now it’s been revealed that he’s actually been hard at work on a very different sort of project.
As the helmer and his company Syncopy collaborate with Zeitgeist Films to oversee and curate Blu-Ray releases, one of the first titles to be announced was a compilation of shorts directed by acclaimed animation directors Stephen and Timothy Quay. And now, it’s been revealed that Nolan has expressed his admiration for the filmmakers in another way: by directing a short documentary, simply titled Quay, about the duo.
Nolan will unveil this documentary on August 19 as part of Film Forum’s series The Brothers Quay on 35mm, which will include new 35mm prints of In Absentia, The Comb and Street of Crocodiles.
Here’s Film Forum’s description of the brothers...
As the helmer and his company Syncopy collaborate with Zeitgeist Films to oversee and curate Blu-Ray releases, one of the first titles to be announced was a compilation of shorts directed by acclaimed animation directors Stephen and Timothy Quay. And now, it’s been revealed that Nolan has expressed his admiration for the filmmakers in another way: by directing a short documentary, simply titled Quay, about the duo.
Nolan will unveil this documentary on August 19 as part of Film Forum’s series The Brothers Quay on 35mm, which will include new 35mm prints of In Absentia, The Comb and Street of Crocodiles.
Here’s Film Forum’s description of the brothers...
- 7/27/2015
- by Isaac Feldberg
- We Got This Covered
Just a year after Interstellar, director Christopher Nolan has already completed his next film, which is set to debut later this year.
Nolan has completed work on a short documentary called Quay, which looks at the career of the Brothers Quay, two American brothers who made some of the most influential stop-motion animation films of all-time. On top of the film, Nolan has also curated and helped funded a restoration of some of the brothers’ work including Streets of Crocodile, In Absentia, and 1991’s The Comb.
Quay is set to premiere in New York City in August and will play alongside some of the restored films in Houston, Seattle, Detroit, Los Angeles, Cleveland, Cambridge, and Chicago. The restored films, and possibly Nolan’s documentary, will be available on blu-ray following the run.
For more information on the film, and where it will be playing, get more info here.
American identical twins working in London,...
Nolan has completed work on a short documentary called Quay, which looks at the career of the Brothers Quay, two American brothers who made some of the most influential stop-motion animation films of all-time. On top of the film, Nolan has also curated and helped funded a restoration of some of the brothers’ work including Streets of Crocodile, In Absentia, and 1991’s The Comb.
Quay is set to premiere in New York City in August and will play alongside some of the restored films in Houston, Seattle, Detroit, Los Angeles, Cleveland, Cambridge, and Chicago. The restored films, and possibly Nolan’s documentary, will be available on blu-ray following the run.
For more information on the film, and where it will be playing, get more info here.
American identical twins working in London,...
- 7/27/2015
- by Zach Dennis
- SoundOnSight
Word around the campfire is Christopher Nolan has finished a "comprehensive draft" of a script for his next film. That right there is the extent of information we have on that, but while he's been doing some writing he's also been doing some directing in the form of a short documentary focused on stop-motion animators Stephen and Timothy Quay (aka the Brothers Quay). The documentary, titled Quay, will screen as part of "The Quay Brothers - On 35mm" at the Film Forum beginning August 19 with Nolan and the brothers in attendance. In addition to the new documentary a selection of Quay films will play, curated by Nolan, including In Absentia (2000), The Comb (1991) and Street of Crocodiles (1986) along with Nolan's Quay, which takes a look at the inner workings of the Brothers' studio. Fandor subscribers can watch several of the Quay Brothers' films right here, including the three just mentioned.
- 7/27/2015
- by Brad Brevet
- Rope of Silicon
Twin animators Stephen and Timothy Quay have done shorts and full on features for several decades.
The Film Stage reports today that "Inception" and "The Dark Knight" filmmaker Christopher Nolan and his company Syncope have teamed with Zeitgeist Films to curate Blu-Ray releases of the Quay's work.
On top of that, Nolan has directed the short documentary "Quay" about the animators, with the short to premiere in New York on August 19th. Nolan along with the Quay brothers will appear in conversation at the two screenings to discuss their work.
"Quay" will screen alongside three of the brother's shorts - 2000's "In Absentia," 1986's "Street of Crocodiles" and 1991's "The Comb". All four films will be presented in 35mm.
The Film Stage reports today that "Inception" and "The Dark Knight" filmmaker Christopher Nolan and his company Syncope have teamed with Zeitgeist Films to curate Blu-Ray releases of the Quay's work.
On top of that, Nolan has directed the short documentary "Quay" about the animators, with the short to premiere in New York on August 19th. Nolan along with the Quay brothers will appear in conversation at the two screenings to discuss their work.
"Quay" will screen alongside three of the brother's shorts - 2000's "In Absentia," 1986's "Street of Crocodiles" and 1991's "The Comb". All four films will be presented in 35mm.
- 7/27/2015
- by Garth Franklin
- Dark Horizons
On the third day of the new year, Hollywood shook off the rust from the two week holiday shutdown and emerged in the desert.
Palm Springs International Film Fest’s Awards Gala gave 10 pre-determined awards to serious awards season contenders at the Palm Springs Convention Center on Saturday night. Those winners, like Reese Witherspoon, J.K. Simmons, Rosamund Pike, “Selma’s” David Oyelowo, and the cast of “The Imitation Game” were already anointed before they headed east. No mystery there.
For the rest of the surprise guests (Brad Pitt, Shirley MacLaine), star surrogates, The Parker’s party scene here’s a...
Palm Springs International Film Fest’s Awards Gala gave 10 pre-determined awards to serious awards season contenders at the Palm Springs Convention Center on Saturday night. Those winners, like Reese Witherspoon, J.K. Simmons, Rosamund Pike, “Selma’s” David Oyelowo, and the cast of “The Imitation Game” were already anointed before they headed east. No mystery there.
For the rest of the surprise guests (Brad Pitt, Shirley MacLaine), star surrogates, The Parker’s party scene here’s a...
- 1/4/2015
- by Mikey Glazer
- The Wrap
Scorsese doc in Berlin, Tokyo sets dates, Pan-Asia Film Festival stretches across UK, Locarno to honour Titanus studio, and Ilkley plans first edition.Scorsese & Tedeschi doc added to Berlin
Untitled New York Review Of Books Documentary directed by Martin Scorsese and David Tedeschi is the newest addition to the Berlinale Special, where it will be shown as a work in progress, followed by a discussion with the filmmakers and key contributors. More here.
Tokyo sets 2014 dates
The 27th Tokyo International Film Festival (Tiff) will be held from October 23-31. Tiffcom will run earlier than last year, from Oct 21-23.
The festival revealed that its 2013 edition drew 121,771 people, up 14%. Tiffcom 2013 hosted 316 exhibitors, up 15%, and 1,074 buyers, up 9%. More info here.
Locarno to celebrate Titanus
The 67th edition of the Locarno Film Festival (Aug 6-16) is planning a retrospective on the Italian production studio Titanus.
The production company was founded by Gustavo Lombardo in 1904, and Locarno will celebrate the company...
Untitled New York Review Of Books Documentary directed by Martin Scorsese and David Tedeschi is the newest addition to the Berlinale Special, where it will be shown as a work in progress, followed by a discussion with the filmmakers and key contributors. More here.
Tokyo sets 2014 dates
The 27th Tokyo International Film Festival (Tiff) will be held from October 23-31. Tiffcom will run earlier than last year, from Oct 21-23.
The festival revealed that its 2013 edition drew 121,771 people, up 14%. Tiffcom 2013 hosted 316 exhibitors, up 15%, and 1,074 buyers, up 9%. More info here.
Locarno to celebrate Titanus
The 67th edition of the Locarno Film Festival (Aug 6-16) is planning a retrospective on the Italian production studio Titanus.
The production company was founded by Gustavo Lombardo in 1904, and Locarno will celebrate the company...
- 1/28/2014
- by wendy.mitchell@screendaily.com (Wendy Mitchell)
- ScreenDaily
(Beware: Spoilers Ahead! If you want to go into "Boardwalk Empire" Season 4 without knowing any details, then it's probably best not to read this article.)
It's been a while since we visited Atlantic City. At the end of Season 3, we witnessed Richard Harrow taking care of business by shooting up Gillian's brothel and killing all of Gyp Rossetti's men. While Gyp escaped the massacre, he was later assassinated by his own right-hand man while urinating on the beach. Closer to home, Margaret called an end to her and Nucky's relationship, and Season 3 ended with Nucky regaining control of the boardwalk, albeit with some limitations.
Until now, we've gotten some glimpses of what's to come in Season 4 with a trailer -- which showed Nucky saying he "didn't ask for trouble".
HuffPost TV found out more when we visited the "Boardwalk Empire" set in Brooklyn, NY.
Nucky, In Absentia
In Season 4, while...
It's been a while since we visited Atlantic City. At the end of Season 3, we witnessed Richard Harrow taking care of business by shooting up Gillian's brothel and killing all of Gyp Rossetti's men. While Gyp escaped the massacre, he was later assassinated by his own right-hand man while urinating on the beach. Closer to home, Margaret called an end to her and Nucky's relationship, and Season 3 ended with Nucky regaining control of the boardwalk, albeit with some limitations.
Until now, we've gotten some glimpses of what's to come in Season 4 with a trailer -- which showed Nucky saying he "didn't ask for trouble".
HuffPost TV found out more when we visited the "Boardwalk Empire" set in Brooklyn, NY.
Nucky, In Absentia
In Season 4, while...
- 8/28/2013
- by Chris Jancelewicz
- Huffington Post
Life on the road is tough, y’all.
This week’s Nashville finds Rayna and Juliette only a few dates into their “Red Lips White Lies” tour, and they’re already having to endure sulking soon-to-be-ex-husbands, lonely mayoral candidates wanting a little attention and guitarists who – despite Rayna’s best efforts — refuse to be Deacon. Read on for the major developments that take place in “I’m Sorry for You, My Friend.”
Related | Nashville Scoop: Will Ming-Na Steal Rayna Away?
In Absentia | Rayna misses Deacon. Everyone knows it. Buddy knows it. Liam knows it. Both of the guitarists Rayna has fired know it.
This week’s Nashville finds Rayna and Juliette only a few dates into their “Red Lips White Lies” tour, and they’re already having to endure sulking soon-to-be-ex-husbands, lonely mayoral candidates wanting a little attention and guitarists who – despite Rayna’s best efforts — refuse to be Deacon. Read on for the major developments that take place in “I’m Sorry for You, My Friend.”
Related | Nashville Scoop: Will Ming-Na Steal Rayna Away?
In Absentia | Rayna misses Deacon. Everyone knows it. Buddy knows it. Liam knows it. Both of the guitarists Rayna has fired know it.
- 1/17/2013
- by Kimberly Roots
- TVLine.com
If you're into grand-scale progressive rock and metal, you've no doubt heard the name Steven Wilson – one of the most talented musicians, songwriters and producers to emerge from the UK prog-rock domain. Known for creating dark, dreamlike soundscapes and transforming melancholy ballads into crushing, terrifying symphonies of thunderous metal riffs and apocalyptic synth passages – imagine a supercharged version of Pink Floyd and you're getting close – Wilson has worked closely with artists like Ian Anderson, Marillion and Opeth (his influence on their albums Blackwater Park, Damnation and Deliverance made them my personal favorites among Opeth's works), but his main outfit Porcupine Tree has risen up from humble experimental roots in the late '80s to become a world-renowned juggernaut of emotionally powerful and ominously heavy music. The new double-cd live recording Octane Twisted represents the band at their absolute peak, both in terms of songwriting skills and overall energy. The dynamic...
- 12/26/2012
- by Gregory Burkart
- FEARnet
The Good Wife might be on winter hiatus, but we aren't ready for the show to go into hibernation quite yet.
Our round table panelists Carla Day, Carissa Pavlica, Christine Orlando and Tiffany Vogt (from TV Addict) break down the happenings from "Battle of the Proxies" and analyze the cliffhangers.
-------------------------------
One murder, two defendants, two counties -- intriguing set up for an episode? Or, too unbelievable?
Tiffany: While I had never considered it before, this could very well happen and they did a good job showing how tricky it would if two people were prosecuted simultaneously in different jurisdictions for the same crime. It made me think carefully about the case at hand for once and I felt more invested as a result.
Carissa: I guess it can happen, but I don't think it should. If word gets around that this is possible, the world could go mad. Mad I tell you!
Our round table panelists Carla Day, Carissa Pavlica, Christine Orlando and Tiffany Vogt (from TV Addict) break down the happenings from "Battle of the Proxies" and analyze the cliffhangers.
-------------------------------
One murder, two defendants, two counties -- intriguing set up for an episode? Or, too unbelievable?
Tiffany: While I had never considered it before, this could very well happen and they did a good job showing how tricky it would if two people were prosecuted simultaneously in different jurisdictions for the same crime. It made me think carefully about the case at hand for once and I felt more invested as a result.
Carissa: I guess it can happen, but I don't think it should. If word gets around that this is possible, the world could go mad. Mad I tell you!
- 12/9/2012
- by carla@tvfanatic.com (Carla Day)
- TVfanatic
Welcome to the latest edition of the Fringe Round Table.
In response to "The Recordist," staffers Sean McKenna, Carla Day, Carissa Pavlica are joined by special guest Annie (@birdandbear) from Fringenuity, as the panel discusses its top moments from the episode...
-------------------------------
What was your favorite Walter moment from the episode?
Sean: I know it was pretty minor compared to what was going on in the episode but Walter putting on the sunglasses and smiling, "Now, this is a ride!" He cracks me up.
Annie: I guess this is slightly more applicable to In Absentia, but I saw it in this episode too: I love the way Walter from the tapes is so melodramatically (if not inaccurately) over the top about their importance, and 2036 Walter is just hanging on every word. Watching him watch himself with those big round eyes cracks me up! For this episode...I think, and my interpretation may be off here,...
In response to "The Recordist," staffers Sean McKenna, Carla Day, Carissa Pavlica are joined by special guest Annie (@birdandbear) from Fringenuity, as the panel discusses its top moments from the episode...
-------------------------------
What was your favorite Walter moment from the episode?
Sean: I know it was pretty minor compared to what was going on in the episode but Walter putting on the sunglasses and smiling, "Now, this is a ride!" He cracks me up.
Annie: I guess this is slightly more applicable to In Absentia, but I saw it in this episode too: I love the way Walter from the tapes is so melodramatically (if not inaccurately) over the top about their importance, and 2036 Walter is just hanging on every word. Watching him watch himself with those big round eyes cracks me up! For this episode...I think, and my interpretation may be off here,...
- 10/17/2012
- by carissa@tvfanatic.com (Carissa Pavlica)
- TVfanatic
Fringe Review, Season 5, Episode 3: “The Recordist”
Written by Graham Roland
Directed by Jeff T. Thomas
Airs Fridays at 9pm (Et) on Fox
This week, on Fringe: The team follows the first, well, third, Betamax and find what is hopefully some red Observer kryptonite
The Great Betamax Hunt is on and this week, it takes our heroes to the forest, which apparently still exists in this overly mechanized future. As in the past two episodes, “The Recordist” favors character moments over action, making it at this point perhaps the most talky sci-fi series since Star Trek: the Next Generation. That’s not to discount the story we get this week, but while the notion of a community of people documenting the human perspective of this new world is interesting, and the father-son story is compelling, it’s hard not to argue that the show is beginning to feel stagnant.
Written by Graham Roland
Directed by Jeff T. Thomas
Airs Fridays at 9pm (Et) on Fox
This week, on Fringe: The team follows the first, well, third, Betamax and find what is hopefully some red Observer kryptonite
The Great Betamax Hunt is on and this week, it takes our heroes to the forest, which apparently still exists in this overly mechanized future. As in the past two episodes, “The Recordist” favors character moments over action, making it at this point perhaps the most talky sci-fi series since Star Trek: the Next Generation. That’s not to discount the story we get this week, but while the notion of a community of people documenting the human perspective of this new world is interesting, and the father-son story is compelling, it’s hard not to argue that the show is beginning to feel stagnant.
- 10/13/2012
- by Kate Kulzick
- SoundOnSight
After a strong second outing, this week’s “Fringe” faltered as it set out on the first of what promises to be several outings dedicated to the scavenger hunt established in “In Absentia”. Well, if all outings are as poorly executed as this one, I think we might be second-guessing the show’s decision to go down this route. It’s more likely that “The Recordist” will be an outlier rather than standard operating procedure over the final ten episodes of the series. But who knows? I didn’t expect last week to knock my socks off, and I didn’t expect this episode to bore...
- 10/13/2012
- by Ryan McGee
- Hitfix
Fridays are a favorite day for a lot of reasons, but one of them is definitely Fringe. And now that it’s finally Friday again, we celebrate the day and the most excellent show with the weekly video offering. This week we have a new Noble Intentions featurette about last week’s episode, followed by three clips. The clips have generally been not too spoilery, but always delicious. Enjoy!
Featurette: Fringe – Noble Intentions: “In Absentia”
Click here to view the embedded video.
Clip: Fringe – Definitely Not Dwarfs from “The Recordist”
Click here to view the embedded video.
Clip: Fringe – Walter Liberates Tape #1 from “The Recordist”
Click here to view the embedded video.
Clip: Fringe – Tape #3 Coordinates from “The Recordist”
Click here to view the embedded video.
Wait, we want more! Now!
Fringe, starring Anna Torv, Joshua Jackson, John Noble, Jasika Nicole, and Georgina Haig, airs Fridays at 9/8c on Fox.
Featurette: Fringe – Noble Intentions: “In Absentia”
Click here to view the embedded video.
Clip: Fringe – Definitely Not Dwarfs from “The Recordist”
Click here to view the embedded video.
Clip: Fringe – Walter Liberates Tape #1 from “The Recordist”
Click here to view the embedded video.
Clip: Fringe – Tape #3 Coordinates from “The Recordist”
Click here to view the embedded video.
Wait, we want more! Now!
Fringe, starring Anna Torv, Joshua Jackson, John Noble, Jasika Nicole, and Georgina Haig, airs Fridays at 9/8c on Fox.
- 10/12/2012
- by Erin Willard
- ScifiMafia
Walter's brain has been through so much over the years on Fringe. William Bell removed a portion of it, September compartmentalized a plan in there somewhere - and then, in 2036, the missing piece was replaced, then an Observer invaded his brain to try to unify the plan.
Plus, there's the LSD.
A fried brain doesn't make finding a disparate plan inside easy, but Walter had a back-up. In "In Absentia," the team returned to Walter's lab and extricated a Betamax tape that included a message from Walter about the plan.
TV Fanatic had the opportunity to visit the Fringe set in Vancouver (trip provided by Warner Bros TV) to speak with cast members Joshua Jackson, Anna Torv, John Noble and Jasika Nicole.
Here's a video clip from Nicole's interview. She talks about the role that Astrid will play in helping Walter with the tapes and remembering the plan:
Jasika Nicole...
Plus, there's the LSD.
A fried brain doesn't make finding a disparate plan inside easy, but Walter had a back-up. In "In Absentia," the team returned to Walter's lab and extricated a Betamax tape that included a message from Walter about the plan.
TV Fanatic had the opportunity to visit the Fringe set in Vancouver (trip provided by Warner Bros TV) to speak with cast members Joshua Jackson, Anna Torv, John Noble and Jasika Nicole.
Here's a video clip from Nicole's interview. She talks about the role that Astrid will play in helping Walter with the tapes and remembering the plan:
Jasika Nicole...
- 10/11/2012
- by carla@tvfanatic.com (Carla Day)
- TVfanatic
We learned what a difference having family can mean to a girl while watching this week's Fringe episode, "In Absentia."
Join some staffers Carla Day, Sean McKenna and Carissa Pavlica as they ponder how the familial ties have affected various members of the Bishop family and what we might expect as they hunt for the missing Betamax tapes during the final run.
-------------------------------------------
How would you explain the personality of Etta using her family and Fauxlivia by comparison. How do you think she came to be who she is?
Carla: She became who she is because she didn't have her family around and she was in a dystopian world. We also don't know anything about what happened to her after the Observers took over. My guess is that she learned to do what she needed to survive. She's like nobody else in her family or Fauxlivia.
Sean: Clearly the times.
Join some staffers Carla Day, Sean McKenna and Carissa Pavlica as they ponder how the familial ties have affected various members of the Bishop family and what we might expect as they hunt for the missing Betamax tapes during the final run.
-------------------------------------------
How would you explain the personality of Etta using her family and Fauxlivia by comparison. How do you think she came to be who she is?
Carla: She became who she is because she didn't have her family around and she was in a dystopian world. We also don't know anything about what happened to her after the Observers took over. My guess is that she learned to do what she needed to survive. She's like nobody else in her family or Fauxlivia.
Sean: Clearly the times.
- 10/9/2012
- by carissa@tvfanatic.com (Carissa Pavlica)
- TVfanatic
Fringe, Season 5, Episode 2: “In Absentia”
Written by David Fury
Directed by Jeannot Szwarc
Airs Fridays at 9pm (Et) on Fox
This week, on Fringe: Etta does some questioning, Peter goes undercover, and Walter carves up an eye
After last week’s tense, action-filled premiere, things slow down a bit with “In Absentia”. We pick up not long after we left off, with the team working to piece together Walter’s former plan. After the rosy reintroductions in the premiere, this week we start to see the cracks in Etta’s thus far squeaky clean exterior. Last week, the world felt bleak. Here, it’s the people.
Writer David Fury brings a matter of fact-ness to the desensitization of his characters. Though the method of torture Etta uses on the Loyalist who stumbles across the team is appropriately futuristic and essentially ages the victim, a Fringe take on the Machine from The Princess Bride,...
Written by David Fury
Directed by Jeannot Szwarc
Airs Fridays at 9pm (Et) on Fox
This week, on Fringe: Etta does some questioning, Peter goes undercover, and Walter carves up an eye
After last week’s tense, action-filled premiere, things slow down a bit with “In Absentia”. We pick up not long after we left off, with the team working to piece together Walter’s former plan. After the rosy reintroductions in the premiere, this week we start to see the cracks in Etta’s thus far squeaky clean exterior. Last week, the world felt bleak. Here, it’s the people.
Writer David Fury brings a matter of fact-ness to the desensitization of his characters. Though the method of torture Etta uses on the Loyalist who stumbles across the team is appropriately futuristic and essentially ages the victim, a Fringe take on the Machine from The Princess Bride,...
- 10/7/2012
- by Kate Kulzick
- SoundOnSight
Fringe Episode 502
“In Absentia”
Written By: J.H. Wyman & David Fury
Directed By: Jeannot Szwarc
Original Airdate: 5 October 2012
In This Episode...
Walter is still not having any luck with the thought unifier. Olivia wants to go back to Walter’s Harvard lab, thinking that he recorded what September told him. Etta informs them that the Observers commandeered Harvard a few years ago. Walter remembers that there are tunnels beneath the university, so the team seeks out the tunnels - with success. It leads them directly to Walter’s lab, the majority of which he has ambered. A video camera was set up to record, and Walter believes he may have taped a message, so priority one is cutting open the amber. To do that, Walter will need a laser. To make that, he will need power. The main power grid is located in the science building - who knows what the situation is like over there?...
“In Absentia”
Written By: J.H. Wyman & David Fury
Directed By: Jeannot Szwarc
Original Airdate: 5 October 2012
In This Episode...
Walter is still not having any luck with the thought unifier. Olivia wants to go back to Walter’s Harvard lab, thinking that he recorded what September told him. Etta informs them that the Observers commandeered Harvard a few years ago. Walter remembers that there are tunnels beneath the university, so the team seeks out the tunnels - with success. It leads them directly to Walter’s lab, the majority of which he has ambered. A video camera was set up to record, and Walter believes he may have taped a message, so priority one is cutting open the amber. To do that, Walter will need a laser. To make that, he will need power. The main power grid is located in the science building - who knows what the situation is like over there?...
- 10/7/2012
- by Alyse Wax
- FEARnet
Last night’s Fringe was one hell of a jaw-dropper. The season premiere set the bar high, and “In Absentia” met it in a big way. The episode saw the Bishops and Astrid returning to the beloved lab at Harvard in a search for clues Walter may have left behind. You may recall from last week that in 2015, before they were Ambered, Walter had been working with September on a way to rid the world of the Observers. The information was scrambled in Walter’s mind as a precaution against Observer mind-reading, and would’ve required a device to be reassembled. The plans were, apparently, destroyed after Walter was captured by Captain Windmark of the Observers. Convinced that Walter must have left documentation behind during his work with September, the team returns to the lab only to find it encased in Amber, along with Walter’s old Betamax recorder.
In...
In...
- 10/6/2012
- by Nadine Ramsden
- TVovermind.com
Last week, Fringe opened with the best season premiere of any show I watched by a fair margin. However, I have been a strong supporter of the show ever since its conception and, as such, I’m fairly biased. This week, however, my unbridled love is a bit “In Absentia” itself. We open with another dream, like last week, of when the Observers struck the beautiful park where Olivia, Peter, and Etta were. Buildings fall, baldies roam, and Etta disappears. The dream is from the Pov of Olivia, foreshadowing that Olivia will have a bigger role than last week (which makes sense, considering she was in Amber for half of last week’s episode). I wonder if the next few episodes will start the same way, with dreams from the Pov of Walter, Astrid, and Etta.
- 10/6/2012
- by FM Overlord
- FamousMonsters of Filmland
The differences between Etta and her family were highlighted during "In Absentia."
Etta is hardened to the ways of the world and not easily swayed at taking the long way around what she considers an easy problem. But her ways of dealing with so-called easy problems are also uncaring and far from compassionate.
The time frame between when the Observers took over and when the Fringe team were ambered was only a few months, and watching Olivia, Peter and Walter try to reconcile the short period in their minds with the lengthy one they've missed is equally intriguing and sad. Where we have our team doing their utmost to protect those who may be innocents caught in the crossfire, we have Etta unconcerned with their innocence or guilt.
She's only concerned with the team they chose, not their reason for making the choice.
For Etta, things are black and white.
Etta is hardened to the ways of the world and not easily swayed at taking the long way around what she considers an easy problem. But her ways of dealing with so-called easy problems are also uncaring and far from compassionate.
The time frame between when the Observers took over and when the Fringe team were ambered was only a few months, and watching Olivia, Peter and Walter try to reconcile the short period in their minds with the lengthy one they've missed is equally intriguing and sad. Where we have our team doing their utmost to protect those who may be innocents caught in the crossfire, we have Etta unconcerned with their innocence or guilt.
She's only concerned with the team they chose, not their reason for making the choice.
For Etta, things are black and white.
- 10/6/2012
- by carissa@tvfanatic.com (Carissa Pavlica)
- TVfanatic
With only 13 episodes in the final season of "Fringe," one might assume that the show would pick up the pace in order to cram as much action and mythology into the remaining time -- but you'd be wrong. The second episode, titled "In Absentia," slowed things down. Without a concrete "freak of the week," the episode served to give us, and Olivia, a better understanding of Etta, while starting to draw a road map for the season's overarching mission.
Walter's brain: When the episode opens, Walter is using the Transilience Thought Unifier Model-11 again, but as it attempts to unify the fragmented plan in his mind, it seems to make him even more addled. He's pretty adamant about not taking it off, though. With all the manipulation of Walter's brain that's happened over the course of five seasons -- not to mention, you know, a whole bunch of drugs --...
Walter's brain: When the episode opens, Walter is using the Transilience Thought Unifier Model-11 again, but as it attempts to unify the fragmented plan in his mind, it seems to make him even more addled. He's pretty adamant about not taking it off, though. With all the manipulation of Walter's brain that's happened over the course of five seasons -- not to mention, you know, a whole bunch of drugs --...
- 10/6/2012
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
A funny thing happened on the way to the “Fringe” forum: the show turned in one of its strongest episodes in recent memory. Last week, I worried about the way the show was exchanging its internal focus for an external one. “Fight The Future” just doesn’t have quite the same personal ring as “Fight For Loved Ones”, which was the show’s previous standard Mo. But if last week’s premiere saw our heroes lost in the shuffle of a new world order and an avalanche of exposition, “In Absentia” brought things down to a far more human-scaled affair. When “Fringe” gets small,...
- 10/6/2012
- by Ryan McGee
- Hitfix
Fantastic Fringe Friday, friends! Yes, it is Fringe Friday, and happily Fox has once again helped us out with several videos and a new cast pic to get us in the mood. Of course it’s unnecessary to “get us in the mood” as we are constantly in a Fringe mood, but don’t tell Fox that, we love the fresh Fringe goodness.
To get us started we have this excellent cast pic, suitable for ogling:
And now for the videos. First we have the return of the wonderful featurettes of John Noble talking about the most recent episode in “Noble Intentions.” Then we have a TV spot and two clips from tonight’s new episode, “In Absentia,” followed by a trailer for the remainder of the season, Olivia joins the ranks of the Wanted, and a special teaser.
Featurette – Fringe Season 5 Noble Intentions: “Transilience Thought Unifier Model-11″
Click here to view the embedded video.
To get us started we have this excellent cast pic, suitable for ogling:
And now for the videos. First we have the return of the wonderful featurettes of John Noble talking about the most recent episode in “Noble Intentions.” Then we have a TV spot and two clips from tonight’s new episode, “In Absentia,” followed by a trailer for the remainder of the season, Olivia joins the ranks of the Wanted, and a special teaser.
Featurette – Fringe Season 5 Noble Intentions: “Transilience Thought Unifier Model-11″
Click here to view the embedded video.
- 10/5/2012
- by Erin Willard
- ScifiMafia
Last week's "Fringe" Season 5 premiere reintroduced us to our favorite characters, catching us up on what we missed given the show's time jump and establishing relationships all over again. This Friday's episode, "In Absentia," gives the audience some much-needed perspective on Etta, Peter and Olivia's adult daughter -- as well as giving us a better understanding of the entire resistance movement against the Observers' reign of terror. Without giving too much away, we scrounged up five things that you can expect to see this week on "Fringe."
1. The episode opens in 2015 again. The premiere began with Peter's nightmare about the day that Etta was taken from him in the park. This week, we'll see the day from Olivia's point of view -- her memories of their last happy moments, and her reaction to Peter's panic in the medical tent. We'll also learn that it was around two months between the...
1. The episode opens in 2015 again. The premiere began with Peter's nightmare about the day that Etta was taken from him in the park. This week, we'll see the day from Olivia's point of view -- her memories of their last happy moments, and her reaction to Peter's panic in the medical tent. We'll also learn that it was around two months between the...
- 10/4/2012
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
Becoming a common theme I know, but a lot of high profile show area now heading toward the second of episode of freshly minted seasons this week. Not only did Fringe kick off its fifth season, as fans know it’s the beginning of the end for the Fox science fiction drama starring Anna Torv, John Noble, and Joshua Jackson. Today we have a pretty substantial “Saga” trailer for you to get you ready for next week’s “In Absentia” (5.02), airing on Fox this Friday.
Georgina Haig’s Etta isn’t wasting any time is she? Sometimes you just have to shock someone. To be honest with you, I’m actually personally excited because upon grabbing this promo I just saw that Amazon Instant added Fringe season 4 for free, so I’m literally going to go catch up on Olivia and the Bishop fam’s adventures Right Now so I...
Georgina Haig’s Etta isn’t wasting any time is she? Sometimes you just have to shock someone. To be honest with you, I’m actually personally excited because upon grabbing this promo I just saw that Amazon Instant added Fringe season 4 for free, so I’m literally going to go catch up on Olivia and the Bishop fam’s adventures Right Now so I...
- 10/3/2012
- by Jay Tomio
- Boomtron
The Fight For Freedom Intensifies On An All-new "Fringe" Friday, October 5, On Fox. The fifth and final season continues when the Fringe team revisits the Harvard lab, now under Observer control, to try to find the information they need as the team fights on in their mission to save the world in the all-new "In Absentia" episode of Fringe airing Friday, Oct. 5 (9:00-10:00 Pm Et/Pt) on Fox. Cast: Anna Torv as Olivia Dunham; Joshua Jackson as Peter Bishop; John Noble as Walter Bishop; Lance Reddick as Phillip Broyles; Blair Brown as Nina Sharp; Jasika Nicole as Astrid Farnsworth.
- 9/29/2012
- ComicBookMovie.com
The first decade of the new millennium would see an abundance of cinematic treasures, disasters and all things in between. It was the decade in which the Webbed-Wonder swung through the streets of New York and battled the Green Goblin, Doc-Ock, Sandman and Venom. It would be the decade of torture porn. It would be the decade in which The Matrix sequels thoroughly disappointed. It would be the decade Michael Bay came into his own as the purveyor of crash-bang action flicks and discovered the photogenic quality of Megan Fox’s ass. It would be the decade that many screen icons left us, whilst others were made. It would be the decade that belonged to high school musicals, vampires, wizards, hobbits and superheroes. It would be the decade that saw the return of Indiana Jones and would see the last screen performance of Clint Eastwood. So many films, so many hours.
- 12/15/2009
- by Martyn Conterio
- FilmShaft.com
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