Categories
Movies

How many did you notice?

‘Dunkirk’ tops 2017 movie mistakes list

Christopher Nolan’s Second World War epic Dunkirk was the most mistake-ridden movie of 2017, according to moviemistakes.com’s annual list of film flubs.

Eagle-eyed movie fans spotted 25 errors in the film, many of them historical, which landed the motion picture first place ahead of Beauty and the Beast and The Fate of the Furious.

Dunkirk’s slip-ups included German planes being the wrong colour and a British Rail train from the 1950s bringing troops back from the war in France in the mid-1940s.

But moviemistakes.com editor Jon Sandys’ favourite movie blunders of the year featured in scenes from the eighth Fast and the Furious movie and Wonder Woman.

He explains, “In Fate of the Furious (Vin Diesel’s character) Dom escapes his crew by crashing through a flower stall, leaving flowers and other debris on his car. Just seconds later we see his car again and it’s pristine – it looks like it’s just been washed.

“In Wonder Woman, as (Gal Gadot’s) Diana is translating in the general’s office, one of the buttons on her coat is undone/missing. As she approaches his desk, it’s suddenly visible on her coat where it should be.”

Spider-Man: Homecoming and It also feature on the top 10 countdown.

The full list is:

1. Dunkirk – 25 mistakes

2. Beauty and the Beast – 23 mistakes

3. Fast & Furious 8 – 20 mistakes

4. It – 18 mistakes

5. Wonder Woman – 15 mistakes

6. John Wick: Chapter 2 – 13 mistakes

7. The Circle – 12 mistakes

8. Spider-Man: Homecoming – 12 mistakes

9. Murder on the Orient Express – 11 mistakes

10. The Mummy – 9 mistakes

Categories
Star Trek

This could be awesome!!!

Quentin Tarantino’s ‘Star Trek’ Will Be R-Rated: ‘The Revenant’s Mark L. Smith Frontrunner Scribe

After it was revealed this week that Quentin Tarantino pitched a Star Trek film to JJ Abrams and Paramount, the whole thing is moving at warp speed. Tarantino met for hours in a writers room with Mark L. Smith, Lindsey Beer, and Drew Pearce. They kicked around ideas and one of them will get the job. I’m hearing the frontrunner is Smith, who wrote The Revenant. The film will most certainly go where no Star Trek has gone before: Tarantino has required it to be R rated, and Paramount and Abrams agreed to that condition. Most mega budget tent poles restrict the film to a PG-13 rating in an effort to maximize the audience. That was the reason that Guillermo Del Toro’s $150 million At The Mountains of Madness didn’t go forward at Universal, even though Tom Cruise was ready to star. The exception to this rule was Fox’s Deadpool, but that film started out with modest ambitions before it caught on and became the biggest R rated film ever.

That rating was crucially important to Tarantino, who hopes to direct this Star Trek and who has helmed R rated films his entire career. Imagine how this could open storytelling lanes, or even what the banter on the bridge of the Starship Enterprise might be, if you conjure up memories of the conversations between Samuel L. Jackson and John Travolta in Pulp Fiction, or the banter at the diner between robbers before the heist gone wrong that triggered the action in Reservoir Dogs.

Smith is best known for writing the Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu-directed The Revenant and subsequently overhauled Overlord, the WWII thriller that Abrams’ Bad Robot is producing for Paramount. Pearce’s script credits include Iron Man 3, Sherlock Holmes 3, Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation and the TV series Runaway TV; he just directed his script Hotel Artemis; Beer’s credits are mostly upcoming, and include the Doug Liman-directed Chaos Walking, as well as Godzilla Vs. Kong, Masters of the Universe, Barbarella and Dungeons and Dragons, all big scale stuff.

They will lock one of the three quickly (if there is a front runner, it might be Smith), and the film will be scripted based on Tarantino’s idea while Tarantino is filming his next film about the Manson summer of 1969, which got set at Sony and has I, Tonya‘s Margot Robbie poised to play Sharon Tate, and Cruise, Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt all having met with the filmmaker about roles.

Categories
Television

Sorry folks…there will be nothing good on TV in 2018!! :o

Sophie Turner Reveals ‘Game of Thrones’ Season 8 Won’t Premiere Until 2019

Sophie Turner has confirmed our worst fear: “Game of Thrones” Season 8 won’t premiere until 2019. The actress behind Sansa Stark revealed to Variety that HBO’s Emmy-winning fantasy epic will skip 2018 and debut its six-episode final season sometime in 2019. HBO has not confirmed a release date for Season 8, but the show was widely expected to return in either 2019 or late 2018 considering production on the show will last through summer 2018.

“Game of Thrones” creators David Benioff and Dan Weiss previously told Entertainment Weekly they were planning to spend at least a year and a half making the final season, which made the 2019 launch date all but certain given that production kicked off in October of this year. HBO has already revealed that Miguel Sapochnik and David Nutter will be returning to the series to direct the final episodes along with Benioff and Weiss. Each episode is rumoured to be feature-length.

The 2019 premiere date actually works to HBO’s advantage when it comes to awards. Season 7 missed the Emmys deadline this year, which means the latest batch of episodes will be contending for awards at the 2018 Emmys next fall. With the final season reportedly set for a 2019 debut, HBO will have two more years to conquer the Emmys with “Game of Thrones.”