Hey, remember Nicolas Cage? That eccentric Academy Award-winning actor who has enjoyed a career full of many ups and downs. It’s very difficult to predict the thespian’s next move, wether his next film is going to be a flop or hit. His latest project Joe, fortunately manages to overcome mediocrity and thankfully, entertains and attracts audiences for its 117-minute run time.
All posts by Unger the Radar
Primeval: New World – The Complete Series
In recent years, television has basically replaced feature films. Gripping storytelling and excellent acting is seen more often on the small screen than on the big. Shows manage to hook viewers and keep them glued to the screen for the duration of their beloved shows. Primeval: New World tries to attempt this trend but doesn’t quite pull it off. It tries hard, that’s for sure but it just ends up as mediocre television at best.
NYCC 2013: Black Sails Roundtable Interview #4
Interview with Black Sails Stars Zach McGowan and Mark Ryan
Q: They were talking about doing the training. I remember the Spartacus guys and the Da Vinci’s Code were on a strict diet. Is it the same for you guys?
Zack McGowan: It’s not that they keep us on a strict diet or whatnot. I mean, you know, they have kind of goals, creative goals, and you either do them or you don’t, depending on, I mean I was just told that I have to go off of any kind of diet because they said I’m in too good of shape, so I’m going back to something. You know, to me, I always stay in shape. For this, I definitely kicked it up a notch. It’s not like you can go to the grocery store in this world, so there is a nature of being on boats, not having a lot of supplies and sick, not having safe drinking water. You know, the Bahamas is a really tough place to get drinking water because they’re small islands that don’t have very high elevation and not very large forests that there was not much clean drinking water around. You get the sense that being lean in this world is pretty specific, so yes and no, but I tend to eat well anyway.
Mark Ryan: I was on a special diet, South African Savignon Blanc, oysters, I ate a lot of kudu, a lot of wildebeest, a lot of kinklet, some lobster. Yes, as you can see, my body is a temple.
Zack McGowan: You guys will have no problem with that, you’ll like everything with that.
Continue reading NYCC 2013: Black Sails Roundtable Interview #4
NYCC 2013: Black Sails Roundtable Interview #3
Interview with Black Sails Stars Luke Arnold and Jessica Parker Kennedy
Q: Are you from West Australia?
Luke Arnold: I studied in West Australia, yeah, so I lived in Australia kind of in every state there. I went to drama school over in Perth. The most isolated city in the world, so, which is good practice for shooting in Cape Town.
Continue reading NYCC 2013: Black Sails Roundtable Interview #3
NYCC 2013: Black Sails Roundtable Interview #2
Interview with Black Sails Stars Toby Stephens and Hannah New
Toby Stephens: I play Captain Flint who is the captain of the Walrus. When we join in, historically he has been the most successful pirate on the island. He’s brought in the most money, but he’s hit a foul patch and his crew is becoming discontented and beginning to doubt his captaincy. There’s a guy on the crew who is trying to get him kicked out because these crews are democracies. They’d all be pressed, the crews and pirate ships have all been pressed to naval ships or onto merchant ships. They were taken away from their families, they were treated appallingly, they were paid very little, it was a very hard life, so when they became pirates, they imposed this real democratic system which was terribly inefficient because every time there was a decision to be made, they all kind of had to go by show of hands. The only time the captain had absolute power was in battle. So anyway, there’s this sense at the beginning of this that Flint is this terrifying figure, but he’s on the back foot, he’s in trouble, they’re going to vote him off, and he has to survive.
Continue reading NYCC 2013: Black Sails Roundtable Interview #2
NYCC 2013: Black Sails Roundtable Interview #1
Interview with Black Sails Creator Jonathan E. Steinberg
Q: Is it safe to say that Treasure Island was one of your favorite books growing up?
Jonathan Steinberg: It was, yeah, who wasn’t? I mean, it’s one of the first adventure stories that you get exposed to, but I think what was fun for us was starting to understand that world. The Treasure Island world and the tone of it, while it’s become the basis for everything pirate that went after, it is not by any stretch a historical document. I mean, it’s a campfire story, and the reality that happened before it is really fascinating and something that’s far more grown-up and far more complicated and far more engaging I think. And so once we were able to dig into that, I think that’s, that’s when we knew there was something here.
Continue reading NYCC 2013: Black Sails Roundtable Interview #1
NYCC 2013: Outlander Roundtable Interview
Interview with Outlander Novel Author Diana Gabaldon and Executive Producer Ronald D. Moore
Diana Gabaldon: It would be nice to have a female character to play off of these guys, since it was essentially Scots vs. English during the Jacobi rising, let’s make her an English woman. We’ll have lots of conflict. So she walked into a cottage full of Scotsmen, one of them stood up and said, “My name’s Dougal McKenzie, and who might you be?” And without my stopping to think, I just typed, “My name’s Claire Elizabeth Beacham, and who the hell are you?” I said, “You don’t sound at all like an 18th century person.” So I found with her for several pages, trying to beat her into shape and make her talk like an 18th century woman. She wasn’t having any of it. She just kept making smart-ass modern remarks and she also started telling the story herself, so it’s all her fault that there is time travel.
NYCC 2013: Da Vinci’s Demons Roundtable Interview #2
Interview with Da Vinci’s Demons Creator David S. Goyer and Stars Tom Riley and Laura Haddock
Q: You had mentioned this show, and I was excited from the get-go, and I loved the details, I love the historical, you know, the details. I don’t know how much time you’ve spent on the research.
David S. Goyer: A lot! I mean, we have a full-time researcher from the show, which is great and I spend a lot of time, just read a ton of shit. Excuse my French. Went to a lot of museums, you know, that kind of stuff.
Continue reading NYCC 2013: Da Vinci’s Demons Roundtable Interview #2
NYCC 2013: Da Vinci’s Demons Roundtable Interview #1
Interview with Da Vinci’s Demons Stars Blake Ritson, Gregg Chillin and Carolina Guerra
Q: So the second season seems to be very mystical, very fantasy, I’d say a lot more than last year.
Blake Ritson: I mean, it’s really, I think everything is bigger this year, really epic. It’s really ambitious. I think structurally, we kind of, it captures going in four different directions. I think it’s a new fun in terms of new alliances, catapulting characters you wouldn’t expect to co-exist together into these queasy alliances. So for example, one of the main thrusts of the series is the believers (not sure if he said believers, but that’s what I got), in terms of what you’re talking about, the mysticism. It’s this arcane compendium of forgotten knowledge which I and Leonardo believe could change the whole socio- political landscape of the world, so in the aftermath of the Pazzi conspiracy, we both think this is the answer. We both drive off across the Atlantic, racing across to the New World, to try to find the Book of Leaves, so as you said, one of the thrusts of the season is a possibly mythological, possibly real artifact… and yes, some interesting things happen. I mean, it’s really pushed to a breaking point. That’s another defining characteristic of the series, physically, mentally, spiritually, and I think with that, we get to glimpse into the dark recesses of the souls of a lot of characters, we get to pull in a lot of gaps that were hinted at in the first series. There’s a lot more information.
Continue reading NYCC 2013: Da Vinci’s Demons Roundtable Interview #1
Just Like a Woman
Friendship and female bonding are fascinating themes film tends to explore on occasion. Girl power as it were, can be a a truly entertaining and meaningful topic to elevate a movie. Just Like a Woman is one such movie and it feels like a watered down, less chaotic Thelma & Louise. The women of this adventure are sexy, smart and ready to face challenges head on.