Tag: infinity war

  • ‘Avengers: Infinity War’ Leads Visual Effects Society Awards Nominations

    ‘Avengers: Infinity War’ Leads Visual Effects Society Awards Nominations

    Marvel Studios

    Marvel is gunning hard for “Black Panther” to be considered for several major awards at next month’s Oscars ceremony, while its other huge 2018 release, “Avengers: Infinity War” will only be submitted in the visual effects category. But the just-announced nominations from the Visual Effects Society Awards prove that “Infinity War” is already the early favorite to claim the Academy’s statuette.

    The VES Awards nominees, announced on Tuesday, were led by “Infinity War,” which nabbed six nods from the group. It will compete against “Ready Player One,” “Solo: A Star Wars Story,” “Christopher Robin,” and “Welcome to Marwen” for the top prize, outstanding visual effects in a photo-real feature.

    In a surprise move, the VES awards snubbed two other releases that seem poised for Oscar nods: “Black Panther” and “Mary Poppins Returns.” Neither of those flicks earned a single nomination Tuesday, though both are expected to compete in the more high-profile Oscar categories (including Best Picture and Best Actress, respectively).

    The top animated feature contender was “Incredibles 2,” while “Lost in Space” earned the most nominations for a TV series. Winners will be announced at a ceremony on February 5, hosted by Patton Oswalt.

    A partial list of nominees is below. For the full slate, check here.

    Outstanding Visual Effects in a Photoreal Feature
    Avengers: Infinity War
    Christopher Robin
    Ready Player One
    Solo: A Star Wars Story
    Welcome to Marwen

    Outstanding Supporting Visual Effects in a Photoreal Feature
    12 Strong
    Bird Box
    Bohemian Rhapsody
    First Man
    Outlaw King

    Outstanding Visual Effects in an Animated Feature
    Dr. Seuss’ The Grinch
    Incredibles 2
    Isle of Dogs
    Ralph Breaks the Internet
    Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse

    Outstanding Visual Effects in a Photoreal Episode
    Altered Carbon; Out of the Past
    Krypton; The Phantom Zone
    Lost in Space; Danger, Will Robinson
    The Terror; Go For Broke
    Westworld; The Passenger

    Outstanding Supporting Visual Effects in a Photoreal Episode
    Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan; Pilot
    The Alienist; The Boy on the Bridge
    The Deuce; We’re All Beasts
    The First; Near and Far
    The Handmaid’s Tale; June

    Outstanding Animated Character in a Photoreal Feature
    Avengers: Infinity War; Thanos
    Christopher Robin; Tigger
    Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom; Indoraptor
    Ready Player One; Art3mis

    Outstanding Animated Character in an Animated Feature
    Dr. Seuss’ The Grinch; The Grinch
    Incredibles 2; Helen Parr
    Ralph Breaks the Internet; Ralphzilla
    Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse; Miles Morales

    Outstanding Animated Character in an Episode or Real-Time Project
    Cycles; Rae
    Lost in Space; Humanoid
    Nightflyers; All That We Have Found; Eris
    Marvel’s Spider-Man; Doc Ock

    [via: Visual Effects Society]

  • The 14 Best Summer Movies of 2018 (So far)

    The 14 Best Summer Movies of 2018 (So far)

     

  • Does ‘The Dark Knight’ Still Hold Up In a Marvel Cinematic Universe World?

    Does ‘The Dark Knight’ Still Hold Up In a Marvel Cinematic Universe World?

    WB/Marvel

    “You’ve changed things. Forever.”

    What the Joker said to Batman in regards to the vigilante normalizing “pancaking cars” on the nightly news for Gotham City also applies to the movie he said it in. “The Dark Knight” is one of two big culprits from 2008 that we can blame for our current multiplex landscape being flooded with one comic book movie after another.

    For the last decade, superhero films have become big business, turning the dreams of Comic-Con Hall H attendees into cash-minting realities.  Some blockbusters have been must-see (2012’s “The Avengers“), some have been wish-we-never-saw (2017’s “Justice League.”) All, however, point to Hollywood’s decade-old feeding frenzy on any IP that can chase “The Dark Knight’s” tail and, hopefully, recreate its critical and box office (mostly box office) success. But Christopher Nolan‘s seminal film wasn’t alone in lighting the fuse on this explosion of bringing comics to the big screen. The other culprit we mentioned? Marvel’s “Iron Man.”

    Marvel

    Opening May 2008 — two months before “TDK” — “Iron Man” turned a B-lister on Marvel’s hero roster into, well, IRON MAN. You can’t think of the Avenger without also thinking of the actor who played him, Robert Downey, Jr. And you’d be hard-pressed to find a character and performance that fully formed so early on, right out of the gate.

    “Iron Man” was a hit that paved the way for the great experiment that was/is the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The MCU is a household name — many of its films are staring at me from my DVD shelf as I write this on my couch. The adventures of Captain America, Thor, a sentient tree with a limited vocabulary, and, yes, even a gun-toting, talking space raccoon have further evolved the landscape, forcing Hollywood to bend to both its will and ways of franchising by way of shared universe.

    “The Dark Knight,” on its tenth anniversary, stands out in sharp contrast to Marvel’s way of doing things. It is, by design, a standalone entry that functions within a larger tapestry beholden to the whims of one man: Nolan.

    As much as Warner Bros. tried to steer their slate of DC films toward a more Marvel-way of doing things in the early days — starting with a Wayne Enterprises logo appearing on a satellite in “Man of Steel” — they had to first contend with Nolan wrapping up his Batman arc the way he intended. That meant that the more fantastical DC heroes like Superman and Aquaman — heroes DC and WB have been trying to make happen with varying degrees of success — had no place in Nolan’s gritty and grounded take on the DCU. Nolan’s vision for DC’s most popular hero was impenetrable; a luxury the filmmaker could afford in a pre-“Avengers” world. (And one he would now, at the very least, receive some push back on.)

    WB

    Efforts to bring Nolan on to help “godfather” the next chapter of DC’s movie efforts — the DC Extended Universe (yawn) — resulted in some behind-the-scenes oversight in the making of 2013’s “Man of Steel.” Outside bringing in his brother, “Dark Knight” cowriter and “Westworld” co-creator Jonathan Nolan, Christopher basically served as an “in-name only” executive producer. (Much to the chagrin of DC fans.)

    The type of success (or lack thereof) that experiment yielded was a very public and pricey “cutting off their nose to spite their face” mess for both DC and Warner Bros. It’s horse-before-the-cart blockbuster filmmaking; WB announced a slate of several films between 2013 and 2020 that, now, are huge maybes or afterthoughts at best. They wanted Marvel’s success, but were unable or unwilling to follow the steps to get there — or risk being accused of copying if they did.

    As a result, Marvel’s continued success sent WB shareholders into a tizzy, resulting in too many executives helicopter mom-ing over “BvS,” which lead to the movie being the misfire that it became. (But at least we got a “Wonder Woman” out of it.) Fans have suffered through Warner and DC’s very public attempts to get their sh** together and their house in order — which, so far, seems to have resulted in less streamlining, more mess: How many Joker movies are in development? Is Ben Affleck out as Batman? Does anyone care about any DC movie other than “Wonder Woman 1984?”

    In the ten years since “TDK” changed how movies are made, it’s held up pretty well in the face of Marvel’s takeover of the genre. If anything, the MCU has impacted post-“Dark Knight” and “Dark Knight Rises” plans heavily, especially without a filmmaker powerhouse like Chris Nolan to provide the stories under scrutiny the air cover only an 800 lb. gorilla like that can.

    As a movie, as a pure cinematic experience, “The Dark Knight” is second-to-none compared to Marvel’s run of films. It has what even Marvel’s best movies seem to lack or not really care to have — weighty, thematic storylines to thread around and through all the action-y tentpoles and set pieces. And that’s more than okay, Marvel! You do you.

    What “Dark Knight” did is prove to Hollywood what most of us already took to be self-evident:  comic book movies can be about something. “Dark Knight” is a crime drama about heroes and villains and the increasingly blurred lines separating the two — and the cost of being the person who takes it upon himself to sort all that out. It just happens to star Batman and the Joker.

    WB

    Equal parts Michael Mann’s “Heat” and borderline Greek tragedy, “Dark Knight” feels relatively small-scale in terms of trailer-moment-friendly action scenes. The film’s biggest action-y set piece, outside of Bat-pod vs. semi truck, comes in the overlong third act, where Batman dangles some of GCPD’s finest — and Joker — from an under-construction building while using the bat sonar from “Batman Forever.” That’s all intercut in part with the ferry sequence, where one boat literally holds the fate of the other in the palm of their hand via bomb detonator. And that all leads to the mostly-verbal showdown between Batman, Two-Face, and Jim Gordon, which results in one of the most satisfying, fist-pumping, “eff yeah!” movie endings/last shots in the history of filmmaking.

    So no sky portals spewing alien armies. No Infinity Stones. Just two or three people in a room, talking.

    In Nolan’s movie, ideas are weapons. Words artillery. And the ensuing thematic barrage results in emotional tragedy that forever resonates for the human beings wearing capes or hiding behind war paint and scars. No Marvel movie, not even the ambitious and, from an early-MCU-days storytelling perspective, very evolved “Infinity War” has come halfway close to pulling off the complex and thematically-charged storytelling we witnessed here for the first time ten years ago.

    In a pop-culture where Marvel’s movie Phases and shared universes are king, “The Dark Knight” is an anomaly. A rebel. It is, to paraphrase Joker, “the immovable object” standing against “the unstoppable force.” Ironically, this movie now arguably represents the very chaos its titular character combats.

    “TDK’s” plot has some loose threads one may not want to pull on (Joker spent how many months setting up citywide “Saw”-like traps and ALL of them went according to plan? A plan made by an “agent of chaos” who rallies against having one? ). Despite logic issues like that, the movie still works. It’s a scary-good delivery system for serious-minded escapist fare.

    Marvel movies are a lot of fun, and can get you right in the feels (RIP, Phil Coulson, Loki, and Peggy). “The Dark Knight, ” though, it sticks with you. It changes you. Forever.

    Long after the final credits roll.

    WB
  • A Marvel Fan Saw ‘Infinity War’ 43 Times and Got Invited to the ‘Avengers 4’ Premiere

    If the insane box office performance of “Avengers: Infinity War” wasn’t already proof that Marvel fans are a rabidly loyal bunch, look no further than a rapper and gamer — and MCU superfan — named Nem.

    Nem has been tweeting about his multiple visits to the multiplex to see “Infinity War” since it opened in April, and has already viewed the flick more than 40 times. (So that’s how the film raced to $1 billion so quickly.) What started out as a seemingly innocuous pledge to see the flick numerous times — something we’re sure many fans say they’ll do, but never actually follow through on — became a quest with no end in sight.

    He’s been posting pics of himself inside the theater, as well as snaps of his ticket stubs, to prove that he’s actually seeing the flick, sometimes twice in one day. And he’s also been sporting some truly awesome Marvel gear while he’s at it.

    When Nem hit 42 views earlier this week, he officially went viral, becoming the subject of a Twitter Moment and getting some press from online news outlets. The buzz got the attention of IMAX, which donated 50 tickets to the fan — who had already squeezed in a 43rd viewing during all of the hullabaloo — to continue his journey. And it also reached none other than Joe and Anthony Russo, the directors of “Infinity War,” who personally reached out to Nem with an insanely awesome offer: An invite to the “Avengers 4” premiere.

    In a video message to his followers, Nem called the crazy turn of events “a whirlwind of amazingness,” adding, “I’ve only got eight lives left. I lost one life last night when I heard the news.” He also said he would be celebrating in the most fitting way possible: By seeing “Infinity War” for the 44th time.

    It’s easy to be cynical about something like this, sneering at someone for wasting their time and money on such a silly pursuit. But we think Nem’s unabashed enthusiasm is awesome, and wish him well on his mysterious, seemingly unending quest. (Also, Nem, if you’ve got a spare ticket to the “Avengers 4” premiere, you know where to find us.)

  • Marvel Chief Kevin Feige Thanks Fans for Helping ‘Infinity War’ Break Records

    Marvel fans are nothing if not a loyal bunch, something they proved this past weekend when “Avengers: Infinity War” broke all kinds of box office records. Now, the film studio is thanking those fans for their unwavering support.

    In a heartfelt letter shared on social media, Marvel Studios chief Kevin Feige reflected on the 10th anniversary of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and praised the entire Marvel team, the cast and crew of all the MCU films, and the comic book creators who shepherded their iconic characters. But Feige saved his biggest shout-out for the fans.

    “Thank you for embracing these characters and stories since we kicked off the MCU ten years ago,” the exec’s letter said. “This past weekend was beyond our wildest dreams. … [T]hank you for being the best fans in the universe and making Avengers: Infinity War the biggest opening weekend of all time.”

    “Infinity War” raked in a jaw-dropping $630 million worldwide in its opening frame, including a $250 million domestic haul that topped previous champ “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” which pulled in $248 million in 2015. With little competition standing in its way right now, it should easily earn another huge pile of cash this coming weekend, too.

    The sky is truly the limit for the MCU, and with plenty more movies on the horizon, the studio should have multiple opportunities to top itself in the coming years. Feige may want to keep his stationery handy.

    [via: Kevin Feige/Twitter]

  • First ‘Avengers: Infinity War’ Reactions: ‘Masterpiece’ Will Make You ‘Need a Drink’

    The world premiere of “Avengers: Infinity War” was held in Los Angeles on Monday night, featuring the biggest stars of the MCU and plenty of excitement over the first chapter of the conclusion of the “Avengers” series. And according to those lucky attendees who got to see the film for themselves, the flick is both “everything you want, [and] nothing you expect.”

    The consensus from the stars, fans, and journalists in attendance was that the film, while perhaps a bit overstuffed (have you heard how many characters this flick features?!), is nothing short of “epic,” and features an emotional rollercoaster that reaches heights of lightness, laughter, and triumphs, but also plenty of lows full of “emptiness” and “despair.” Writer-director Kevin Smith declared the movie a “masterpiece” (and was apparently so high on the flick that he forgot about the very social media embargo pictured in his tweet), but also cautioned fans that “it’s gonna be a looooong year until @Avengers 4…”

    Check out some more hyperbolic reactions — including some pretty clever emoji-only reviews — below.

    The full review embargo will be lifted at 6 p.m. EST tonight. Expect plenty more details from critics then (or, if you’d prefer to go into the film completely blind, you should probably keep off of the internet entirely until you can see the flick for yourself).

    “Avengers: Infinity War” officially opens this Friday, April 27.

    [via: Twitter Moments]

  • Sorry, Marvel Fans: The Studio Won’t Hold a Comic-Con Hall H Panel This Year

    Marvel fans may want to rethink booking their tickets for this year’s Comic-Con: The studio is skipping its annual panel presentation at Hall H.

    That’s what several media outlets are reporting after speaking with none other than Marvel Studios head honcho Kevin Feige, who told reporters from both Vulture and Collider that the MCU would still have a presence at SDCC to celebrate its 10th anniversary. But there won’t be any splashy cast reunions or big-time movie reveals at a fan-packed panel event.

    “Kevin Feige just told me that while Marvel will still have a floor presence, they’re skipping the usual Hall H panel to let the dust settle from INFINITY WAR,” Vulture’s Kyle Buchanan tweeted.

    Collider offered a few more details from Feige, including the reminder that this isn’t the first time that Marvel will be missing from Hall H (they also skipped the panel after the first “Avengers” flick in 2012, as well as in 2015). And according to the exec, the studio purposefully wants to avoid giving out any information about its upcoming slate of flicks — including not proving the names of several untitled films scheduled to hit theaters in 2020 until after “Avengers 4” is released in May of 2019.

    Skipping a flashy Comic-Con panel is certainly one way of ensuring absolute secrecy about its future releases, though as fans noted on Twitter, it’s a bit odd, considering the studio has been promoting the 10th year of the MCU so heavily and seemed primed for a big, celebratory Hall H event. And now, there won’t be any more “Avengers” panels at Comic-Con, since “Avengers 4” will come out well before SDCC 2019 (currently scheduled for July).

    While this news may be disappointing for fans, at least they can comfort themselves with the knowledge that “Avengers: Infinity War” is coming out on Friday (or Thursday night, for those who bought tickets for advance showings).

    [via: Vulture, Collider]

  • Carrie Coon Revealed as ‘Avengers: Infinity War’ Villain Proxima Midnight

    The cast of “Avengers: Infinity War” just got even bigger: The film’s co-directors have revealed that there’s going to be at least one more villain assisting Josh Brolin‘s Thanos in the flick, and she’s played by an Emmy-nominated actress.

    While speaking with the UK’s Radio Times, co-directors Joe and Anthony Russo spoke about the actors playing Thanos’s hechmen, known collectively as the Black Order. In addition to confirming the casting of Tom Vaughn-Lawlor (as Ebony Maw) and Terry Notary (as Cull Obsidian), the Russos also dropped a new bit of intel: “Fargo” and “The Leftovers” star Carrie Coon will play the only female member of the Black Order, known as Proxima Midnight.

    Coon herself shared the exciting news on Twitter, revealing, “My voice and a dazzle of gifted animators have teamed up to play Proxima Midnight.” The star went on to explain that she also completed some motion-capture work — using mostly her face — to bring the villainess to life.

    According to Radio Times, a mo-cap performance seems like it was definitely necessary to accurately portray Proxima Midnight, who in the comics “is armed with a spear that possesses the power of a time-distorted sun and is coated in an incredibly deadly toxin.” Another interesting tidbit from her original Marvel Comics storyline: she’s married to another Black Order henchman, Corvus Glaive. That character’s casting has yet to be announced, and there’s already been lots of speculation about just who could be playing him (Radio Times thinks it may be Peter Dinklage, who’s known to be in “Infinity War,” but whose character has yet to be revealed).

    Coon joins an already insanely-stacked ensemble, led by Chris Evans, Scarlett Johansson, Chris Hemsworth, Robert Downey Jr., Chris Pratt, Chadwick Boseman, and just about every other MCU character you can think of. While Coon’s role might seems small by comparison, we already know that her leader, Thanos, is getting the majority of the screen time. That may mean we wind up seeing quite a bit of the actress, too.

    Fans will find out very soon: “Avengers: Infinity War” opens on April 27.

    [via: Radio Times, Carrie Coon/Twitter]

  • Chris Evans Says He’s Done Playing Captain America After ‘Avengers 4’

    For the past several years, Chris Evans has been hinting — and at times, even outright declaring — that he will likely hang up his Captain America shield after his Marvel contract expires. Now, with the release of the second-to-last “Avengers” flick looming, Evans is once again saying that his days in the MCU are numbered.

    In an interview with the New York Times, the actor chatted about his upcoming Broadway debut in a new play from “Manchester by the Sea” writer-director Kenneth Lonergan. The role — of a narcissistic cop — is a bit of a departure for Evans, the chiseled face of the moral Captain for the better part of a decade, and as the actor explained it, it was time to try something different.

    Here’s the relevant passage from the Times:

    Last year, he filmed back-to-back the final two Marvel movies for which he is under contract — “Avengers: Infinity War,” due in April, and a sequel planned for next year. For now, he has no plans to return to the franchise (“You want to get off the train before they push you off,” he said), and expects that planned reshoots in the fall will mark the end of his tenure in the familiar red, white and blue super suit.

    Based on Marvel fans’ love of Evans as Cap, it seems silly that anyone would want to push him off the MCU platform. But Evans has expressed a restlessness in his Marvel role for years, so it makes sense that the end of this “Avengers” chapter would also be the end of his part in it.

    Plus, “Infinity War” and “Avengers 4” certainly have a finality about them, with other actors also teasing that this will be their final rodeo, too. And fans can’t help but read into every comment that every cast member makes, wondering if they’ll survive the upcoming “War.”

    Audiences will find out soon enough: “Avengers: Infinity War” is slated to hit theaters on April 27, and “Avengers 4” will debut on May 3, 2019.

    [via: The New York Times]