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September 18th, 2008 by Davodd

Trailer: Blindness

OPENS: October 3, 2008
RATING: R (Violence, Sexual Assault, Language, Nudity)
GENRE: Horror, Thriller, Science Fiction
WEBSITE: http://www.blindness-themovie.com/

Starring: Julianne Moore, Mark Ruffalo, Danny Glover, Alice Braga, Gael García Bernal, Sandra Oh, Yusuke Iseya

Director: Fernando Meirelles

Writer: Don McKellarbased on Don McKellar’s novel.

Plot: From Nobel Prize-winning author Jose Saramago and acclaimed director Fernando Meirelles (“The Constant Gardener” and “City of God”) comes “Blindness.” It is described as “the compelling story of humanity in the grip of an epidemic of mysterious blindness. It is an unflinching exploration of human nature, both bad and good – people’s selfishness, opportunism, and indifference, but also their capacity for empathy, love, and sheer perseverance.”

It begins in a flash, as one man is instantaneously struck blind while driving home from work. His whole world is suddenly turned to an eerie, milky haze. One by one, each person he encounters – his wife, his doctor, even the seemingly Good Samaritan who gives him a lift home – will in due course suffer the same unsettling fate. As the contagion spreads, and panic and paranoia set in across the city, the newly blind victims of the “White Sickness” are rounded up and quarantined within a crumbling, abandoned mental asylum, where all semblance of ordinary life begins to break down.

But inside the quarantined hospital, there is one secret eyewitness: one woman (Moore) who has not been affected but has pretended she is blind in order to stay beside her beloved husband (Mark Ruffalo). Armed with increasing courage and the will to survive, she will lead a makeshift family of seven people on a journey, through horror and love, depravity and beauty, warfare and wonder, to break out of the hospital and into the devastated city where they may be the only hope left.

September 17th, 2008 by Davodd

Trailer: Ghost Town

OPENS: September 19, 2008
RATING: PG-13 (Language)
GENRE: Fantasy, Romantic Comedy

Starring: Ricky Gervais, Greg Kinnear, Téa Leoni

Director: David Koepp

Writer: David Koepp & John Kamps

Plot: He sees dead people… and they annoy him.

Bertram Pincus (Ricky Gervais), is a man whose people skills leave much to be desired. When Pincus dies unexpectedly, but is miraculously revived after seven minutes, he wakes up to discover that he now has the annoying ability to see ghosts. Even worse, they all want something from him, particularly Frank Herlihy (Greg Kinnear) who pesters him into breaking up the impending marriage of his widow Gwen (Téa Leoni). That puts Pincus squarely in the middle of a triangle with spirited results.

September 16th, 2008 by Davodd

SFTV Ratings: Fringe dominates genre competition

Last week marked the beginning of summer re-run season is ending as FOX jumped the gun, with the debut of the new science fantasy/horror series, Fringe, on Tuesday. The network also started its new season of Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles.

Every other science fiction, fantasy or horror show on broadcast TV last week was still in reruns.

In the battle for viewers, Fringe attracted 9 million viewers last Tuesday – topping the list of genre programs. The show’s debut brought in close to 10% of the viewing public, which is FOX’s highest debut for a drama series in two years.

The network ran a repeat episode of Fringe on Sunday, Sept. 14, where it attracted an additional 5.7 million viewers for about 6 percent of the TVs being used that night.

It’s a good start, but may not be an indication of how well the show will perform once ABC, CBS and NBC stop showing repeats and start airing new episodes on Tuesdays. Luckily, Fringe has a great lead-in following House starting on the 16th.

FOX’s other debut this past week, the sophomore season of Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles didn’t fare as well against NBC’s Deal or No Deal and CBS’s repeat of The Big Bang Theory. Sarah Connor attracted a mere 6.3 million viewers, barely beating out a repeat of Ghost Whisperer for the No. 2 Genre TV spot.

Following are the ratings for speculative fiction shows that aired on the broadcast networks last week:

SHOW [NET] # Viewers – 18-49/% watching (18-34/%) | Date

  • 1. Fringe [FOX] 9 million – 3.2/9 (2.5/8) | Sept. 9
  • 2. Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles [FOX] 6.3 million – 2.4/7 (2.1/6) | Sept. 8
  • 3. Ghost Whisperer (repeat) [CBS] 6.2 million — (1.6/5) | Sept. 12 (9 p.m.)
  • 4. Fringe (repeat) [FOX] 5.7 2.3/6 (19./6) | Sept. 14
  • 5. Ghost Whisperer (repeat) [CBS] 5.7 million — (1.5/5) | Sept. 12 (8 p.m.)
  • 6. Chuck (repeat) [NBC] 2.5 million — (0.8/3) | Sept. 13
  • 7. Smallville (repeat) [CW] 2 million – 0.8/2 (0.7/2) | Sept. 11
  • 8. Supernatural (repeat) [CW] 1.7 million – 0.6/2 (0.5/2) | Sept. 11

Source: Nielsen Media Research

September 14th, 2008 by Davodd

Top 10 Genre Movies: Dark Knight leads diminishing pack

In its ninth week in release, Batman flick. The Dark Knight continued its reign at the box office this past weekend ad was top film over a dwindling group of genre films at the box office.

No new science fiction, fantasy, horror or spy-fi films have opened over the past two weekends as mainstream comedies dominated at North American movie theatres.

To date, Dark Knight  has brought in more than $517 million in ticket sales in in the U.S. and Canada, with a total of its second weekend – more than $966 million worldwide. According to Warner Brothers – expect the film to be pulled from theatres in the next week wees, only to be re-released in January 2009 during the Oscar season. The studio is hoping for both Academy Awards and to break the billion-dollar mark in ticket sales.

Genre films set to debut next week: Ghost Town starring Ricky Gervais, Greg Kinnear and Tea Leoni and the animated family fantasy, Igor starring the voices of John Cusack, John Cleese, Steve Buscemi, Eddie Izzard, Jennifer Coolidge, Jay Leno, Molly Shannon and Christian Slater.

Following are the Top 10 speculative fiction movies in release in North America for the weekend of September 12-14, 2008.

RANK #. (Overall Rank) Title – Weekend Gross | Total Gross [Budget]

  1. (7) The Dark Knight – $4.0 million | $517.7 million [$185 million]
  2. (10) Death Race – $2.0 million | $33.2 million [$45 million]
  3. (11) Babylon A.D. – $1.8 million | $20.3 million [$70 million]
  4. (14) Fly Me to the Moon – $1.3 million | $9.9 million [$25 million]
  5. (16) Journey to the Center of the Earth – $1.1 million | $98.0 million [$60 million]
  6. (18) Mirrors – $0.90 million | $29.1 million [budget unknown]
  7. (19) Star Wars: The Clone Wars – $0.82 million | $33.9 million [$budget unknown]
  8. (20) The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon King – $0.60 million | $101.5 million [$145 million]
  9. (22) WALL-E – $0.5 million | $220.1 million [$180 million]
  10. (33) Hellboy II: The Golden Army – $0.10 million | $75.8 million [$85 million]

Source: Box Office Mojo – list only includes science fiction, spy fi, fantasy and dark fantasy/horror titles.

September 14th, 2008 by Davodd

Review: FOX’s Fringe is a creepy good time

The newest high-profile science fiction TV series debuted this past week. Created by J.J. Abrams (LOST), it follows the live of a government agent who stumbles upon one the biggest secrets in the world – and she finds out there is no going back. Following is a review of the pilot episode of this new series, Fringe.

Airs: Tuesdays, 9 p.m. (ET/PT)
Network: FOX
Rating: TV-14 (Graphic Violence, Language, Adult Situations)

First of all, let’s settle one dispute: Fringe is not a true “science fiction” series. The physics used in the show do not add up. The “science” behind the wonders depicted in this series is just too unbelievable to be taken seriously. So don’t. If you can get past that, you will probably enjoy this series.

If you must label the show with a specific subset of genre fiction, Fringe would fall under “science fantasy” – which is just like any other fantasy story, except the traditional trappings such as magic potions, spells, and crystal balls are replaced by the trappings of science. Potions become drugs; spells become computer code and mathematical algorithms, and crystal balls become the Internet. The list goes on, but you get the point.

According to interviews in the mainstream press, J.J. Abrams wanted to recreate the allegorical qualities of classic science fiction, fantasy and horror TV such as that written by Rod Serling. His goal is to comment on today’s society while using a fantastic world of fiction to depict harsh realities without turning off network censors or the viewing public who just wants to be entertained.

That’s a tall order – but judging from the pilot episode, it just may work.

Fringe is a smart, thrilling, funny and scary series. It holds the potential to be as good as X-Files or Supernatural. That is – if FOX doesn’t cancel the show before audiences find it – as the network has done countless other times.

CAST

  • Olivia Dunham, played by Anna Torv
  • Peter Bishop, played by Joshua Jackson (Dawson’s Creek)
  • Dr. Walter Bishop, played by John Noble (Lord of the Rings)
  • Phillip Broyles, played by Lance Reddick (The Wire)
  • Charlie Francis, played by Kirk Acevedo (Oz)
  • Nina Sharp, played by Blair Brown

ABOUT THE STORY
(SPOILER WARNING)

Fringe follows the lives of a mid-level government security agent named Olivia Dunham (Anna Torv) and the people around her.

But before we get to her, the pilot episode starts out on an airplane during an international flight – when something horrible goes wrong. (So far, this looks and feels like the first episode of LOST – which is odd since that’s the show that J.J. Abrams is famous for creating).

The something wrong here appeared to be some sort of ultra-fast flesh-eating virus that literally causes the flesh to melt off the bones of the plane’s passengers and crew during mid-flight.

It turns out the plane landed safely because of auto pilot landing available at Boston’s airport. That’s when the Feds arrive: CIA. FBI, the CDC and Homeland Security. It turns out that the hero of the story, Olivia Dunham is some sort of inter-agency liaison set up after 9/11.

As agents from the different agencies gather, a man named Phillip Broyles (Lance Reddick) from Homeland Security takes charge – giving assignments to everyone except Dunham. As it happens, sometime in the past, she was an investigator that uncovered that some of Broyles friends were crooked – which led to their arrest. Broyels doesn’t like Dunham and mocks her and her job – but eventually relents and allows her to take part in the investigation – doing grunt work.

As it turns out, Dunham is having an affair with a co-worker – a fellow agent – which is forbidden by their employer. That man also is on the same case.

While checking out a warehouse, Dunham and her boyfriend are caught in an explosion. She had minor injuries – he got – “infected” by some mysterious fatal condition or disease … or something … that made his flesh turn translucent. But the fatality was slowed by inducing an artificial coma and putting him on ice – literally.

That’s the set up for this story. Dunham fights against time and a boss that hates her to save the life of her boyfriend. In doing so, she tracks down a man – Dr. Walter Bishop (John Noble) – who was working on similar technology for the U.S. government in the 1970s. Of course he went nuts and now lives in a loony bin – with no visitors except for immediate family. Her boss will not let her use federal authority to get the guy out of the asylum.

Now we have a woman fighting against time, a boss that hates her and her only hope to save her boyfriend is a man trapped in a loony bin. Getting interesting – if not plausible.

It turns out that all of Dr. Bishop’s immediate family is dead – except for a son – Peter Bishop (Joshua Jackson) who is running from the mob and trying to scam Iraqi government contractors into getting a job in Baghdad. Naturally, Peter Bishop has an IQ of 190 and is a genius like his father. He’s also running from the mob because of gambling debts incurred while trying to get rich off casinos.

Dunham uses some arm twisting and bluffing (the guy is obviously bad at gambling) to get Peter out of Iraq and on a plane to Boston to visit the elder Dr. Bishop – who Peter hates, naturally.

As it turns out, in saving her boyfriend’s life, Dunham uncovers a “pattern” and some secrets that the world governments are keeping from the general population. In this case, those “governments” also include a huge corporation called Massive Dynamic, which is kind of like a cross between Microsoft and GE. The owner of the company is Dr. Bishop’s former lab partner. We don’t met the big boss of Massive Dynamic, but we to meet Nina Sharp (Blair Brown), his left-hand woman (her right hand is bionic).

By the end of the pilot, Dunham has assembled a Scooby gang of sorts which includes the Bishops and her assistant Astrid Farnsworth (Jasika Nicole). Oh, and she also saves the life of her boyfriend, is betrayed and ultimately gains the acceptance and respect of her boss.

He likes her so much, he offers her a new job fighting “the pattern” and unlimited resources to get it done… Hence a series begins.


September 13th, 2008 by Davodd

Trailer: Igor

OPENS: September 19, 2008
RATING: PG (Some scary situations, Minor adult themes)
GENRE: Fantasy, Animation

Starring: (voices of) John Cusak, John Cleese, Steve Buscemi, Sean Hayes, Eddie Izzard, Jennifer Coolidge, Jay Leno, Molly Shannon

Director: Anthony Leondis 

Writer: Chris McKenna

Plot: In a land of mad scientists and diabolical inventions, what do you do when you’re born with a hunch on your back? You become an Igor. A hilarious twist on the classic monster movie, “Igor” tells the story of one Igor who’s sick of being a lowly lab assistant with a Yes Master’s degree and dreams of becoming a scientist. When his cruel master kicks the bucket a week before the annual Evil Science Fair, Igor finally gets his chance.

With the help of two of his experimental creations – Brain, a brain in a jar who’s a little light on brains, and Scamper, a cynical bunny brought back from being road kill, Igor embarks on building the most evil invention of all time, a huge, ferocious monster. Unfortunately, instead of turning out evil, the monster turns out as Eva, a giant aspiring actress who wouldn’t hurt a fly.

Just when the load on his back can’t get any heavier, Igor and his band of monstrous misfits uncover an evil plot that threatens their world. Now, they must fight to save it and prove that heroes come in all shapes and sizes.

September 7th, 2008 by Davodd

Top Genre TV Shows: National Treasure dominates

NBC’s showing of theatrical movie, National Treasure led the meek offering of genre-related programming this past week on broadcast television. The Nick Cage-starring fantasy spy-fi adventure flick beat out repeat episodes of Ghost Whisperer and Chuck to take the genre crown in the few day before the Big 5 networks started rolling out their fall TV premieres.

The CW pre-empted showings of Reaper, Supernatural and Smallville for the debut and repeat airings of re-tread teen soap opera 90210 - a re-make of the 1980s FOX hit series.

Following are the ratings for speculative fiction shows that aired on the broadcast networks last week (August 29-September 4, 2008):

SHOW | [NETWORK] | Rating (Air Date)

  • National Treasure [NBC] 1.8 [August 31]
  • Ghost Whisperer [CBS] 1.4 (August 29)
  • Chuck [CBS] 0.7 (August 30)

Source: Nielsen Media Research

September 1st, 2008 by Davodd

Most-popular FanDominion stories of August 2008

Below is a list of the most-visited FanDominion stories published during the month of August 2008:

  1. Fan Speak: A to Z now available
  2. Top 12 Genre TV: War of the Worlds takes top spot
  3. Review of Reviews: ‘Mirrors’ made for gore fans
  4. Review of Reviews: Fly Me to the Moon a so-so historical kiddie flick
  5. Top 10 Genre Movies: Dark Knight 3-peats atop box office
  6. Why we love Roger Ebert? Cuz he’s one of us.
  7. The Dark Knight: A Fan’s Review
  8. Top 10 Genre Movies: Dark Knight dethroned by Ben Stiller
  9. Review of Reviews: ‘Henry Poole is Here’ a modern Christian fantasy
  10. Fan Speak: X – Y – Z
September 1st, 2008 by Davodd

Top 10 Genre Movies: Babylon A.D. towers over genre competition

Despite poor reviews, dystopian newcomer Babylon A.D. topped the genre Labor Day holiday weekend box office with just under $10 million in ticket sales. It was second overall, behind only the comedy blockbuster Tropic Thunder.

Lat week’s No. 1 – Death Race – fell to the No. 3 spot among genre films (No. 6 overall) with about $6.3 million in ticket sales.

The No. 2 genre spot was held by Batman flick, The Dark Knight, which passed the half-billion mark in North American sales this past weekend. Racking up $8.6 million in ticket sales for a grand total of $502.3 million in domestic sales, added to the $417 million foreign takem the film reached a total gross of $921.7 million worldwide.

Needless to say, there will be more Batman films in future years.

No genre films are set to debut over the next two weeks.

 

Following are the Top 10 speculative fiction movies in release in North America for the 2008 Labor Day weekend.

RANK #. (Overall Rank) Title – Weekend Gross | Total Gross [Budget]

  1. (2) Babylon A.D. – $9.6 million | $9.6 million [$70 million]
  2. (3) The Dark Knight – $8.6 million | $502.3 million [$185 million]
  3. (6) Death Race – $6.3 million | $23.1 million [$45 million]
  4. (11) Mirrors – $2.74 million | $24.8 million [unreported budget]
  5. (12) Star Wars: The Clone Wars – $2.70 million | $29.6 million [unreported budget]
  6. (13) The Mummy: Dragon Emperor – $2.6 million | $97.9 million [$145 million]
  7. (15) Journey to the Center of the Earth – $1.8 million | $94.6 million [$60 million]
  8. (18) Fly Me to the Moon – $1.5 million | $6.3 million [$25 million]
  9. (21) Wall-E – $1.1 million } $217.9 million [$180 million]
  10. (29) Hellboy 2 – $0.2 million | $75.4 million [$85 million]

Source: Box Office Mojo – list only includes science fiction, spy fi, fantasy and dark fantasy/horror titles.

August 29th, 2008 by Davodd

Review of Reviews: Critics find Babylon A.D. incomprehensible

OPENS: August 29, 2008
Rating: PG-13 (Intense violence, Language)
Genres: Science Fiction, Dystopia
Starring: Vin Diesel, Gerard Depardieu

“Veteran-turned-mercenary Thoorop takes the high-risk job of escorting a woman from Russia to America. Little does he know that she is host to an organism that a cult wants to harvest in order to produce a genetically modified Messiah,” or so say the studio teasers.

“Ugh,” or so say the critics – well those who saw it. The studio refused to have advance screenings for film critics – usually a sign a film is a dud.

The movie’s director, Mathieu Kassovitz agrees. as reported by the Reelz Channel:

 ”I’m very unhappy with the film,” Kassovitz ranted to AMC. “I never had a chance to do one scene the way it was written or the way I wanted it to be. The script wasn’t respected. Bad producers, bad partners, it was a terrible experience.”

Kassovitz, who described parts of the movie as “like a bad episode of 24,” places the blame squarely on the shoulder of studio backer 20th Century Fox. Fox, ironically, also happens to produce TV’s 24.

Look on the bright side, sci-fi fans: Babylon A.D. may not be the second coming of Blade Runner, but it should provide for the best DVD director’s commentary ever.

 Mainstream film critics agree.

WATCH THE TRAILER

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  • Great well-known and loved cast.

{/rw_good} –>

<!– {rw_bad}

  • The movie’s director has trashed the film, saying the studio hacked the heart out of it.
  • Disjointed characters and plot.

{/rw_bad} –>

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"More inert than argon gas and given over to obvious directorial hissy fits, Babylon A.D. is like a bad dream a cyberpunk once had” – Bill Gibron

{/for}

{for=”IGN” value=”2″}

“French director Kassiovitz himself has decried the theatrical cut of Babylon A.D., and watching the film it’s easy to understand why: whole chunks of plot, much less their explanation, have clearly been excised.” – Todd Gilchrist

{/for}

{/for}

{for=”Variety” value=”3″}

“Fans of Pitch Black, hoping Diesel would reprise the stone-faced Richard Riddick role here will be disappointed.” – Jordan Mintzer

{/for}

{/rw_score} –>