Brad Bird’s live-action project? It’s gonna be epic.
The list of books I have to read before seeing upcoming movies just keeps getting longer and longer.
Near the top of that list you can add “1906,” the novel by James Dalessandro that interweaves fact and fiction in telling several stories that revolve around the great San Francisco Earthquake of 1906. Why? I’ve just learned that Brad Bird’s long-rumored next Pixar project, which will mix CG animation with live action, will indeed be based on Alessandro’s novel.
Mr. Bird, of course, has already directed three of my favorite animated movies, “Ratatouille” (still the best movie I’ve seen that year), “The Incredibles” and “The Iron Giant” (if I’m forced to pick, my individual favorite animated flick of all day - just ahead of “Kiki’s Delivery Service.”)
This, however, is clearly a huge leap forward, even for him. The novel, apparently narrated by a newspaper music critic, is all about big-city corruption that revolves around a fictional character, Adam Rolf, who runs the city’s corrupt political syndicate and the city’s “puppet-mayor.” There’s a ton more going on and, of course, soon after the earthquake, so that definitely sounds like my kind of read (if anyone has read that already and has an opinion on it, please do share!)
Coogan lands truly looney role
Anyone remember Eddie “The Eagle” Edwards? When I first saw the name associated with that story, I confess I had to look it up considering I had completely forgotten that lovable loser.
Mr. Edwards was Great Britian’s first Olympic ski-jumper and, rather predictably I suppose, he indeed managed to finish dead last in the 1988 Winter Olympics ski-jumping events. Now, however, his story will be told by easily one of my favorite comic actors.
Steve Coogan, definitely best up to that point when he’s playing the prick, will
“His story is a very British story, and he is a very British kind of hero,” Coogan said. “When I read the story, I found it funny but, more surprisingly, quite moving. Quirky, dysfunctional, slightly nerdy, but his balls must be made of titanium.”
Titanium balls indeed. Mr. Coogan got his biggest exposure mugging it up with Owen Wilson as Octavius in “Night at the Museum,” but whether you want to see him in full comic bluster do yourself a favor and rent “Tristram Shandy” (a k a “A Cock and Bull Story.”) I can virtually agree you’ll thank me afterward.
Carla Gugino is Sally Jupiter
I’m surely more than a little late with that, but in my universe at least, any news about Carla Gugino is good news. And I’d have to shout that great news.
In what is quickly becoming the best ensemble cast ever for a comic-book flick, Gugino has joined Zack Snyder’s “Watchmen” as Sally Jupiter, the burlesque dancer-turned-superhero as the Silk Spectre, a member of the Watchmen-preceeding Minutemen.
And in case you’re keeping track, that brings the announced cast so far to: Patrick Wilson (Night Owl), Jackie Earle Haley (Rorschach), Matthew Goode (Ozymandias), Billy Crudup (Dr. Manhattan), Jeffrey Dean Morgan (The Comedian) and Malin Akerman as the new Silk Spectre. That list was already adequate to get me jazzed, but whether you really want to get my attention, just add Carla Gugino to anything and you’ve got me hooked.
Original post by Reel Fanatic
No comments yet. Be the first.
Leave a reply



















