Showing posts with label Christopher Nolan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christopher Nolan. Show all posts

Sunday, September 4, 2011

First Look at Superman's New Costume











Filming in the street usually means lots and lots of photo opportunities which allow us to catch a glimpse of what a movie like "Man of Steel" will look like. Some weeks ago Warner Brothers released the first official image of Henry Cavill as Superman, but the dark texture of the image didn't allow for a clear look at the suit. Now, thanks to the heroic efforts of some anonymous photographer, we get a much better look at the Superman suit. It's easy to notice that the design has suffered some modifications, but nothing too drastic. It actually looks pretty cool. First thing I noticed was that the yellow belt is gone, allowing for a more streamlined costume design. Overall, the suit has a very modern feel to it, which is a good thing. I'm just curious as to why in one picture he has the red cape on and in the other, no cape. Is it possible that in some scenes the cape will be added through CGI ?



"Man of Steel" is directed by Zack Snyder ("300", "Watchmen") and produced by Christopher Nolan ("The Dark Knight", "Inception"), with a production budget estimated at $175M. Beside Henry Cavill as Superman/Clark Kent, the movie also stars Amy Adams as Lois Lane, Michael Shannon as General Zod, Laurence Fishburne as Perry White, Kevin Costner as Jonathan Kent, Diane Lane as Marha Kent, Julia Ormand as Lara Lor-Van and Russell Crowe as Jor-El. Scheduled for release on June 14, 2013.




















     RELATED POSTS :









Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Laurence Fishburne Joins MAN OF STEEL

Zack Snyder's roster of actors for the 2013 reboot of the Superman franchise, "Man of Steel", adds one more. Today it was announced that Laurence Fishburne, who you probably know and love as Morpheus from "The Matrix", has signed on to play Perry White, editor-in-chief for the Daily Planet and Clark Kent's boss. There's a bit of a controversy going on as we speak regarding the fact that the character Perry White from the comics was white, which means Snyder will probably come under fire from die-hard Superman fan s with this casting decision. I personally love the fact that Fishburne is returning to the mainstream and I'm certain he can bring the proper kind of on-screen gravitas to his scenes.

Among previous actors who have embodied Perry White are Jackie Cooper in Richard Donner's "Superman" and Frank Langella in Bryan Singer's "Superman Returns". Zack Snyder's version, scheduled for release on June 14, 2013, already has an all-star cast which includes Henry Cavill as Superman/Clark Kent, Amy Adams as Lois Lane, Diane Lane and Kevin Costner as Clark's adoptive parents, Michael Shannon as General Zod and Russel Crowe as Superman's father. The script is penned by David S. Goyer, based on a story by Christopher Nolan, who will also produce the movie.



     RELATED POSTS :

Sunday, July 31, 2011

THE DARK KNIGHT RISES - Bane Costume Revealed

Click the images to see them enlarged

"The Dark Knight Rises" has moved back to Pittsburgh and resumed filming, and that's where JustJared.com managed to take some pictures of Tom Hardy in full-gear as Bane, one of Batman's most dreaded villains, as well as Batman's new Tumbler, which is basically the old one with military camouflage. In the pictures, Bane is standing on top of the Tumbler, which has sparked a great deal of speculation on the Internet about what this means in terms of plot. As usual, I will refrain from any such speculations, but I will say that Bane looks like a cyborg from some kind of post-apocalyptic scenario.

It's really too soon to say if he looks ridiculous, or not, because we'll have to see him in action before passing judgement, but I'm sure Hardy is capable of crafting a menacing character, so the costume really is a secondary thing here. There's also a video of the crew allowing a bride and groom to take a closer look at the Tumbler, which is pretty cool. 





     RELATED POSTS :

Monday, July 18, 2011

THE DARK KNIGHT RISES (2012) - Teaser Trailer and Poster



Click to Enlarge
Official Synopsis: N/A

Genre: Action, Crime, Sci-Fi

Starring: Christian Bale, Anne Hathaway, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Tom Hardy, Gary Oldman, Marion Cotillard, Morgan Freeman, Juno Temple, Michael Caine, Liam Neeson, Matthew Modine, Nestor Carbonell

Director: Christopher Nolan ("The Dark Knight", "Inception")

Screenplay: Christopher Nolan and Jonathan Nolan

Not Yet Rated

Release Date: July 20, 2012



     RELATED POSTS :

Sunday, July 3, 2011

THE DARK KNIGHT RISES (2012) - Set Video, Christian Bale and Anne Hathaway



The on-set video features Anne Hathaway (Selina Kyle/Catwoman) and Christian Bale (Bruce Wayne/Batman) in a scene together at Wollaton Hall, in England, which serves as the new Wayne manor. At the end you can even spot director Christopher Nolan approaching to discuss something with the actors. The movie comes out July 20, 2012. I think I'll leave the storyline speculations to the specialists out there. Instead, here are three more videos, one which shows off the splendid Wollaton Hall, and the other serving as reminder that they need a bigger gate. To Watch them read the full article.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>

Monday, June 6, 2011

THE DARK KNIGHT RISES - New Viral Videos, Fan-Made or Not ?

"The Dark Knight Rises" is quickly amping up its publicity campaign, even before the completion of the actual production. A handful of viral videos, supposedly posted by The Fire Rises, the same username that was used in the Twitter viral game that resulted in a picture of Tom Hardy as Bane, have surfaced on YouTube.

Tom Hardy as Bane
The videos (click to read the full article) contain garbled footage and seem to hint at some crazy events occuring in Gotham City. One of them shows a TV broadcast talking about a breakout at Arkham. All videos contain the weird chant that was found on the movie's official site. Word on the street...er, the web, is that these clips are fan-made. There's also a facebook account for The Fire Rises, that sort of looks fake. Initially the name on the user info page was Warner Bros Entertainment, but now it just contains the release date of the movie. You can check out the facebook account for yourself by clicking here. The like count keeps on rising every minute. Whether it's all fake or not, I guess it doesn't even matter. Everybody's interest is piqued, and the buzz is buzzing, so it's win-win for Christopher Nolan. His movie gets more news coverage and that's all that really matters. If you're thinking of checking out the real official websites, here they are :
(read the full article to watch the videos) 

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Lost in the labyrinth with Christopher Nolan (Part II)

What, if anything, is at the center of Christopher Nolan's maze?
In my first post on Inception, I attempted to explain why Christopher Nolan's blockbuster had incited such passion on the Web (and such recalcitrance elsewhere), using the director's own hints as guide.  And in brief, I found in the pitched battle over the movie a war between two cultures: the culture of film - with its attenuated but still real roots in theatre, music, and art - and the culture of the virtual, in which only genre and paranoid onanism hold sway.  Critics looked at Inception and saw everything it lacked: characters, narrative, resonant symbolism; but geeks simply saw themselves, writ large, and with superb skill.  To them, it seemed obvious that a dream should look like The Matrix (or some other cool action flick); because what else would a dream look like?  What is a film for other than to provide thrills, to serve as "a wild ride"?

Which isn't to say that Inception isn't brilliantly made, or that Nolan isn't very, very clever.  It is, and he is - what's more, the director clearly has his finger on something new that's embedded in the culture; his immense commercial success, built on movies of undeniable intellectual challenge, make his legacy impossible to ignore.  But the question remains - is that "something new" he has tapped into capable of making art - or is it simply replacing art?

In short, what is Nolan's legacy made of?  I'd argue that in their complexity, his films mirror art, and maybe even great works of art; but their material is always derivative of art (the way "genre" is) without ever quite becoming, Pinocchio-like, the real thing.  Of course it's been a staple of film criticism for a long time that pop can achieve the status of art - and it arguably has, in movies like The Godfather and Citizen Kane - but these days it seems the greatness of those pop baubles may have really been due to the actual sources of art leaking into genre on the down low.  A sense of the tragic isn't actually indigenous to Mario Puzo's The Godfather, for instance; Francis Ford Coppola worked it into his movie sideways, from his knowledge of opera and theatre.  Ditto Roman Polanski, and Orson Welles, and even Alfred Hitchcok.  And critics did handsprings over their movies because they sensed in them an old magic in a new, populist form.

But when Christopher Nolan goes to work - with a brain just as sharp as Coppola's, if not more so - he doesn't try to tap into theatre, or opera, or even the great movies of the past; he simply tries to deepen genre with more genre.  Thus as we get lost in the maze of a movie like Inception, we only meet up with - other movies.

The imagery for "The Dawn of Man" in "2001."
To see why this is so, ponder, for a moment, what many consider the "ambiguities" of Inception, next to what we think of as real ambiguity in genuine works of art.  And no, with apologies to William Empson, we won't even reach as high as Shakespeare - let's look again, instead, at Stanley Kubrick (in whose artistic vineyard Inception fans imagine Nolan is toiling).

Kubrick has his flaws, of course, but his movies are genuinely ambiguous - indeed, as we watch them repeatedly, an almost frightening sense of thematic depth often opens out beneath us.  Take 2001, for instance (above and below) - it took viewers a long time to appreciate that the "computer-goes-crazy" story of HAL hooked seamlessly into the meditation on mind and machine that was threaded through the whole movie.  Indeed, after repeated viewings, fans realized that much in the film was ambiguous - even early reviewers chuckled, for instance, that HAL seemed like the most "human" character in the movie, but only gradually did viewers realize what that meant.

Other assumptions - such as the unseen presence of "aliens" behind the mysterious monolith (an assumption of "genre," btw) - likewise collapsed over time.  By now, we appreciate 2001 as a strange, slow poem on the question of what, exactly a machine is - and whether we ourselves are anything more than that (and whether the universe is, either; note the visual parallels between HAL's "eye," below, and the sunrise above).

And the imagery for the dawn of HAL.

There's a similar thematic apparatus working through most of Kubrick's oeuvre; Full Metal Jacket simultaneously illuminates the protective and destructive aspects of the war instinct; Eyes Wide Shut ponders the dance of sex and death.  But if these movies are sometimes recondite, or seem frustratingly paradoxical - if they simply pause sometimes in the hope that we'll "catch up" with their imagery - it's because their themes (not merely their techniques) are recondite and paradoxical.  Kubrick never dabbles in deception for its own sake; he doesn't indulge in sudden narrative boomerangs just to "blow our minds."  He's simply not interested in keeping us on our toes as a means of distraction.

But sometimes it seems that's all that Nolan is interested in.  Indeed, the essence of Inception is his relentless cutting between different "levels" of narrative (in case you haven't seen the movie, the dreams-within-dreams afford convenient dilations of time) without any sense of thematic development.  Sure, effects from one dream are interpolated into another, but this only creates possibilities for cool special effects, as when gravity goes all nonsense in one lengthy action sequence.  Meanwhile the psychology of lead character Cobb (as he burrows deeper and deeper into his own psyche) basically remains at the level of an average Oprah Winfrey show - only drenched in a paranoid expectation that everything that "seems" to be happening isn't really "real."  Much as a resident of Second Life knows deep down inside that he doesn't really have wings, so Cobb is half-sure that everything (and everyone) he encounters is a construct - of his employers, or his enemies, or even, perhaps of his own subconscious.

The trouble for Inception is that such an enveloping sense of suspicion basically flattens any hope of the film inspiring any rich emotion (aside, of course, from self-pity).  Even the one possibly resonant surprise at the center of the maze (how Cobb "killed" his wife with the idea that reality itself was an illusion) quickly devolves into a new game-board of dream-gambits that really only exist for their own sake.  Thus when a train - which we realize figures as the means of her death, both real and imaginary - pops up unexpectedly in another, seemingly unrelated, dream, the moment hardly registers as meaningful; in fact it's only about as resonant, as it clicks into the movie's paranoid pattern, as one of the numbers on a Rubik's cube.

So while software geeks, and other obsessive-compulsives, may squeal with delight at every chance to chase Nolan's unreliable narrative weasel around his virtual mulberry bush (the last shot provides a final opportunity to do the same thing with the whole film), grown-ups without access to a bong and a dorm room may find themselves checking out of the whole experience long before its official end.  Or will end up looking at it merely as a kind of memory exercise for over-grown children (the inevitable Lego tribute, at left).

But to be fair, Nolan almost seems aware of this artistic problem himself; he seems half-cognizant of his own inability to create actual art from his brilliance.  Indeed, for most of its running time, Inception largely exists as a defense against its own emptiness.  Over and over again, the director feeds us the same strange-loop catnip as a way of fooling us into thinking his movie is actually going somewhere thematically, instead of merely cycling through three or four ideas that only seem intriguingly ambiguous because it's impossible (due to his ongoing game of narrative monte) to differentiate between them.

Thus the deep, unspoken mood of Inception is something like impotent introspection.  And looking back, it seems that the defining motif of Nolan's career has been a similar form of brooding isolation - think of Batman alone on that urban spire in Batman Begins (at right), grimly surveying a vast landscape of genre, but always separate from it: that's Nolan (and his fans).  And in Inception, that loneliness has metastasized into his own brain: Nolan and his heroes are now even isolated from themselves.

Or is that very lack of connection, perhaps, Nolan's great meta-theme?  Is the true meaning of his oeuvre its self-aware meaninglessness?  Such a claim sounds ridiculous, I know, until you wonder - is Nolan so very far from, say, M.C. Escher?  True, Escher isn't as grandiose, or as self-aggrandizing, as Nolan; the spooky metaphysics of his strange loops burrow into the brain without the help of caped crusaders or leather-clad biceps, or even the cool corporate chic of Inception.  And just btw, the narrative strange loop figures in plenty of Western culture, from The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark down to Borges; my favorite example of it in movies, in fact, may be the kitten that wakes up at the close of Celine and Julie Go Boating.  What makes Nolan different, however, is that in his cinema, the strange loops are all that exist in artistic terms; the rest is a derivative flotsam of borrowed imagery and familiar tropes floating over a bottomless well of adolescent angst.


But what if that's all that exists for the audience, too?  In a way, it's possible to read Nolan (at left, in high recursion mode) as an avatar of the post-cultural artist, the professional who can conjure for the crowd the illusion of art's complexity without any of its actual content.  And in a world in which the "market" has replaced the "culture," and in which much of the mass audience already "lives" in a world that doesn't really exist, what other option does an ambitious artist have?  Perhaps film is destined to follow the other visual arts into that self-aware but barren realm in which art is denuded of its ancient richness, but still edges forward on the strength of this or that intellectual strategy, this or that awareness or critical stance.

And given that likelihood, maybe the brilliant Christopher Nolan is the best we can hope for; maybe, in fact, it's time we all bid Stanley Kubrick and his kind good-bye.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Lost in the labyrinth with Christopher Nolan (Part I)


Our fandom, like our politics, has become steadily more polarized - but few directors  have been quite as controversial as Christopher Nolan, the blockbuster auteur responsible for Memento, The Dark Knight, and now Inception, the sleeper (in more ways than one) of the summer.

Indeed, as A.O. Scott famously pointed out, Nolan by now is so polarizing that an online flame war broke out over Inception before the movie even opened - this after a tsunami of threats and rants had washed over the Internet when the critics (and the Academy Awards) didn't rate The Dark Knight as highly as the sages of Ain't It Cool News had. Within days a conventional wisdom had coalesced that Nolan could be counted on to pull in the big bucks, but simultaneously divide moviegoers into factions about as affectionate as the Shi'ites and the Sunnis.

Things didn't start out that way. Nobody even saw the director's first feature, Following (except me, it seems), but everybody loved Memento, the "backwards" thriller about a man suffering from a rare memory disorder. And everyone went batty over Batman Begins, Nolan's clever resuscitation of a comic franchise that had turned cartoonish.

But then came The Dark Knight and Inception - Nolan's biggest hits yet - and soon battle lines had been drawn between those who insisted these movies were masterpieces (but were hard pressed to explain exactly why), and those reviewers who found them brilliantly realized, but strangely empty - and dramatically pointless. The fanboys had an answer to these critics, however - they might not be able to "explain" Nolan's work, but someday it would be explained, just as the films of Stanley Kubrick survived initial critical drubbings to slowly reveal themselves as the great works they are.

In all this, however, little illuminating has been said about Inception - so I was surprised to discover, when I finally caught up with the movie a few weeks ago, that the most insightful critic of Inception may in fact be its director. For Christopher Nolan has embedded in his recondite magnum opus (which may be a masterpiece of its type, more on that later) a pretty accurate - and pretty obvious - guide to his own drives, methods, and meaning. This has happened before - Hitchcock, Lean, and Fellini all proffered exegeses of their own oeuvres in films as diverse as The Birds, Doctor Zhivago, and 8 1/2. It just took the critics years to catch up to these director's self-analyses.


But first things first - sorry, fanboys, Christopher Nolan is no Stanley Kubrick (at left, in HAL's memory bank), even if superficially both directors are drawn to themes that conceal their own contradiction. Or make that "even if Nolan is drawn over and over to a single theme, which, somewhat like Kubrick's many themes, contains within itself its own contradiction."

That theme, of course, is the reliability of subjectivity. Which leads me immediately to another misconception about Inception (one the movie promulgates itself): Nolan's film is in no serious way about dreams or dreaming. The director may import his lead character's dead wife into his "dreams," but she's essentially window-dressing on a plot that has nothing like the logic of a dream, with a symbology that's utterly unresonant, and never psychologically disturbing. Indeed, the movie's supposed nightmares are hopeless kitsch - they play as out-takes from action flicks as various as The Matrix and Where Eagles Dare (as the dreaming gets "deeper," the movies get more old-school). "Dreaming" merely serves the film as what Hitchcock would have called its "MacGuffin." Indeed, Nolan hardly bothers explaining how, in even the most general way, a dream could be shared by several people, much less "architected" (what, precisely, could Ellen Page's "dream architect" be "architecting" a dream from?). In speculative fiction, these kinds of logistical lacunae are generally covered by references to some leap in technology or theory - like Star Trek's "warp drive" - but Nolan doesn't even bother to nod in that direction, because he knows that we know his movie is really about something else entirely.

For the film's true "leap" is not into the dream world but rather the virtual one. Without ever saying so aloud, Nolan exploits with Inception a presumptive mind-set that has already taken hold in his audience - that the digital realm of video games and the Internet is a genuine subjective experience we can fruitfully compare to dreaming (just as we're now supposed to believe Sandman is on a continuum with War and Peace). This sleight-of-hand may be what many critics, with their memory of the "thick" psychological themes you used to be able to expect in "cinema" (such as that of, say, Stanley Kubrick), have responded to with such ire; you can feel Nolan in one fell swoop superficializing a huge swath of movie culture, and maybe the culture in general. Remember those episodes of Futurama in which people found companies were advertising in their dreams? Well, that would hardly matter if the dream itself were no more than an overblown heist movie.

So the thinness of Inception's conception of "dreaming" is of a piece with its actual subject, the online world of mediated experience.  And unsurprisingly, that world dovetails with Nolan's personal obsessions.  Remember how earlier I mentioned that the director was his own best critic? Well, what I had in mind was an early scene in Inception in which Leonardo DiCaprio asks Ellen Page's dream architect to come up with a maze - a really tough one; she responds with a sketch of a circular labyrinth - like the kind that Theseus faced (so it's no surprise her name is "Ariadne").  In a movie that's generally utterly flat in its affect, this one gesture struck me with sudden resonance. For of course Inception itself is structured as a kind of double circular maze - its heroes descend deeper and deeper into "dreams" with "dreams", while the movie itself is edited into a  circular labyrinth of possible narratives, some (or all) of which lead to dead ends.

And just by the way, the circular maze counts as a metaphor for much of Nolan's oeuvre as well; in a way, it's his signature. People were mistaken, for instance, to imagine that Memento, his breakout movie, was structured "backwards" - indeed, when fans watched the scenes in reverse on their DVD players, some were dismayed to discover that the narrative didn't quite "add up" as it should. This is because Memento was actually constructed as a kind of circular maze, with scenes nestled within each other like Russian dolls - every time the hero "woke up" into an earlier time frame, we got a bit more of his surrounding circumstances. There are echoes of the technique in The Dark Knight as well - although in that paranoid opus, we never got to "wake up" into an awareness that might have explained its relentlessly bleak events.

In "Inception," even Paris folds in on itself.
In the case of Inception, the maze of Theseus has added resonance in that it's also reminiscent of recursion, the looping process central to programming, in which a function takes itself as its subject, then takes the resulting "subject" as its next "subject," and so on and on to infinity - or until some bound is reached. (In Inception, that "bound," I suppose, is the strange state of "limbo" which - in my interpretation - begins, ends, and encapsulates the whole narrative.) And for the techno-savvy, that resonance derives from their nervous sense that even our shared "reality" is just a way-station on a spiraling loop heading down (or up) into "limbo," too. To them, we are all like Leo DiCaprio's Cobb (we just don't know it). In short, Nolan hooks the fanboys by aping, in cinematic form, a mindset they use constantly in work and play, and which, as a result, they tend to project as the organizing principle of the universe. Therefore pointing out the superficiality of Nolan's narrative looping isn't just a piece of criticism - it's an attack on a mode of being, an entire way of life.

But can that way of life actually yield anything that we might think of as genuine "art"? More on that paradox - and others - in the second part of this posting.