Showing posts with label King Kong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label King Kong. Show all posts

Friday, 17 March 2017

KONG : SKULL ISLAND : Tuesday 14th March 2017.

I saw 'KONG : SKULL ISLAND' in the week. Wanting to catch a movie for which I could leave my brain at the door, I saw this offering in 3D because it was the only session that suited my timing. I wasn't disappointed by the first point, but I was for the second and maybe because 3D has been done to death now that it is no longer the novelty that it once was, and let me tell you 3D does little for this film beyond what you would expect. That said, the film does have other redeeming features.

In 84 years of film making history, 'King Kong' has featured countless times in live action and animated forms, in dramatic thrillers and cheesy send ups, on his own or battling some other equally menacing foe. 'King Kong' first mesmerised audiences back in 1933 by the remarkable stop-motion effects of Willis O'Brien, and a story that began on Skull Island, somewhere near Indonesia where as well as Kong, dinosaurs and giant insects also roamed the wild undiscovered landscape. In this origin story Kong is tracked down by filmmaker Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong) and falls for Ann Darrow (Fay Wray) culminating in the classic closing sequence atop the Empire State Building from which Kong eventually falls to his death. On the strength of this film, 'Son of Kong' was immediately put into production and released later on in 1933. 'Mighty Joe Young' followed in 1949 also featuring Robert Armstrong, and remade in 1998 starring Bill Paxton and Charlize Theron. Then courtesy of Japanese cinema, came 'King Kong vs. Godzilla' in 1962 and 'King Kong Escapes' in 1967. 1976 saw the Dino De Laurentiis produced remake 'King Kong' and that same year the Brits released the send up of all King Kong movies with 'Queen Kong'. 'King Kong Lives' was released in 1986 and Directed by John Guillermin who also Directed the 1976 film. Peter Jackson delivered us 'King Kong' in 2005 with all the modern day cutting edge technical wizardry he could throw at his three time Oscar winning film that brought in US$550M at the global Box Office. And so in 2017 we have another King Kong offering Directed by Jordan Vogt-Roberts, made on a budget of US$185M and starring an ensemble cast and featuring a raft load of special effects and filmed in northern Vietnam, Hawaii and on Australia's Gold Coast. It has so far taken US$163M, and has garnered generally positive Reviews.

Set in the early '70's a secret organisation called 'Monarch' locate an island that is shrouded in mystery and is said to contain several new species. That island is named 'Skull Island' because from the air the island resembles the shape of a skull in profile. Enter Bill Randa (John Goodman) who works for Monarch who sets up the expedition to go boldly where no man has gone before. He and colleague Houston Brooks (Corey Hawkins) - a young geologist, Yale University graduate and well known for his ground breaking work on seismology seek the funding support from Senator Willis (Richard Jenkins) who reluctantly gives it. In turn Randa and Brooks recruit James Conrad (Tom Hiddleston) a former British Air Services Captain who saw time in Vietnam and who has a particular set of tracking and survival skills. Also hired is Preston Packard (Samuel L. Jackson) who leads the Sky Devils helicopter squadron who have to chopper in the expedition team. And then there's Mason Weaver (Brie Larson) a pacifist photojournalist who has an affinity with nature and the environment.

Pretty soon, the team are assembled and are en route via cargo ship to Skull Island and into the unknown. They get their briefing, military style, and as they approach, the order is given to man the helicopters and negotiate their way through the islands own weather system which sees the island shrouded in thick storm clouds. For Packard and his team of hardened Vietnam War vets, this is a walk in the park, and what could possibly go wrong with a few lightning strikes and a little wet weather? How wrong could they be?

After successfully negotiating the surrounding storm front the fleet of choppers emerge into sudden clear blue skies, sunshine and lush tropical islands below - a picture of paradise lost! Randa and Packard give the order to Brooks to release the seismic charges and they detonate in the verdant forests below shaking the ground with explosion after explosion. This draws the attention of a certain giant bipedal ape the like of which no man has ever witnessed before, and one by one 'Kong' plucks the helicopters out of the sky, swatting them like flies and sending them crashing down to the dense forest floor below. Many are destroyed resulting in those that survived being split into two groups.

After burying their dead, the group containing Conrad, Weaver and Brooks and young Monarch biologist San Lin (Jing Tian) amongst a few others, stumble across a deserted ancient looking village. Venturing inside they are met with local Iwi natives and Hank Marlow (John C. Reilly) who was shot down over the island in a aerial dogfight 28 years earlier during WWII and has been on the island ever since despite his eight attempts to get of it. He has been befriended by the Iwi's, has lived with them all this time, and has learned a thing or two about the island, and it's giant animal life - friendly and harmless, and not so!

Marlow tells the group that Kong is the island's guardian and is worshipped as a god by the natives for protecting them from 'Skullcrawlers'. These reptilian underground lizard monsters slaughtered Kong's parents and ancestors, leaving him as the last of his kind. Marlow also tells them that Kong only attacked the helicopters to prevent the bombs from awakening the largest Skullcrawler, and therefore protecting the locals from it. After being welcomed by the Iwi who take the group back to their heavily fortified village (for protection from the Skullcrawlers, not Kong), and learning more of their culture and beliefs, the group head out on a motor boat that Marlow spent six years building out of salvaged parts from his WWII downed plane. In the meantime, Conrad has an up close and personal encounter with some of the wildlife present on the island!

Needing to reunite with the second group and rendezvous at a designated time with a resupply team in the islands north, Conrad and his group disembark their boat upstream in search for Randa, Packard and his men. They reunite, but Packard is insistent that they continue to search for missing right hand man, Jack Chapman (Tony Kebbell). Little do they know that Chapman was eaten by a Skullcrawler earlier on. Conrad leads the team into the 'Forbidden Zone' - a former battleground and now graveyard containing the skeleton remains of Kong's ancestors.

The Skullcrawler that killed Chapman emerges and attacks, devouring Randa in a moment of lost concentration as he played with his camera. Many of Packards soldiers are massacred too, before Weaver kills it by setting off an explosion. Packard blames Kong for the deaths of his men and wants vengeance. He retrieves seismic explosives from one of his downed helicopters to lure Kong into a trap and kill him using napalm.  Conrad in turn leads the non-military group back to the boat so they can rendezvous with the resupply team in time.

The groups now separated again, with Packard vowing to destroy the giant ape in a ball of fire, and Conrad working back to meet up with the boat. While out scouting the surrounding lie of the land to get their bearings from a high peak with which to look down, Conrad and Weaver come face to face with Kong. Sensing that Kong is not the bad guy here, they resolve to do what they can to save him, to which Marlow staunchly agrees. 

As Kong turns away from Conrad and Weaver his attention is grabbed by fires and explosions set by Packard to lure the ape out into the open, and engulf him in napalm flame. Packard is successful in bringing Kong down, but he's not out. Meanwhile a standoff ensues as Conrad and Weaver arrive at the scene just before Packard is about to butcher Kong once and for all, using more explosives. The group is attacked by the dominant Skullcrawler, giving Kong enough time to recover his senses and stand on his two feet. As Packard is set to detonate the explosives taking out Kong, so Kong stamps on him with his giant size 38 feet!

As Conrad, Weaver and Marlow seek their escape back to the boat and a waiting Brooks and Lin, they are pursued by the Skullcrawler. At which point Kong arrives to their aid, and an epic battle ensues between the two giant creatures. Kong prevails needless to say by ripping out the Skullcrawlers guts through its mouth at the end of its elongated forked tongue. The group make their getaway with Kong looking on, he then turns and walks away. 

In a post credits sequence, Conrad and Weaver are held in detention and interrogated by Monarch officials, and Skull Island expedition survivors Brooks and Lin in a bunker at some undisclosed location, watched from behind a one way window. Conrad and Weaver are told that Kong is not the only monster to roam the world, and are shown archive film of cave paintings depicting Godzilla, Rodan, Mothra, and Ghidorah. This sets up the already announced Legendary Pictures 'MonsterVerse' and their planned May 2020 release of the 'Godzilla vs. Kong' film.

I enjoyed this film, but it is everything you would expect it to be. A simple somewhat implausible popcorn story that sees strong enough performances from the principle cast, but which are overshadowed by the special effects, the action set pieces, the enormity of Kong (delivered expertly though motion capture by Terry Notary), and the other creatures that share Kong's world. There is a high body count with bodies getting eaten, trampled on, thrown asunder and dismembered, and the film runs along at a solid pace without any melodramatic interludes. Sure 'Kong : Skull Island' stands tall in the pantheon of better 'King Kong' film fare in its 84 year history, but not tall enough to outshine its original predecessor. Worth a look on the big screen nonetheless.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Saturday, 7 January 2017

Birthday's to share this week : 8th - 14th January 2017.

Do you celebrate your Birthday this week?

Fran Walsh does on 10th January - check out my tribute to this Birthday Girl turning 58, at the end of this feature.

Do you also share your birthday with a well known, highly regarded & famous Actor or Actress; share your special day with a Director, Producer, Writer, Cinematographer, Singer/Songwriter or Composer of repute; or share an interest in whoever might notch up another year in the coming seven days? Then, look no further! Whilst there will be too many to mention in this small but not insignificant and beautifully written and presented Blog, here are the more notable and noteworthy icons of the big screen, and the small screen, that you will recognise, and that you might just share your birthday with in the week ahead. If so, Happy Birthday to you from Odeon Online!

Sunday 8th January
  • John McTiernan - Born 1951, turns 66 - Director | Producer | Writer
Monday 9th January
  • J.K.Simmons - Born 1955, turns 62 - Actor
  • Imelda Staunton - Born 1956, turns 61 - Actress
  • Joely Richardson - Born 1965, turns 52 - Actress  
Tuesday 10th January
  • Fran Walsh - Born 1959, turns 58 - Producer | Writer | Songwriter
  • Walter Hill - Born 1942, turns 75 - Director | Producer | Writer  
Wednesday 11th January
  • Jason Connery - Born 1963, turns 54 - Actor | Producer | Director
  • Amanda Peet - Born 1972, turns 45 - Actress  
Thursday 12th January
  • Kirstie Alley - Born 1951, turns 66 - Actress | Producer | Writer
  • Anthony Andrews - Born 1948, turns 69 - Actor | Producer
  • John Lasseter - Born 1957, turns 60 - Producer | Director | Writer | Animator | Voice Actor
  • Oliver Platt - Born 1960, turns 57 - Actor
  • Rob Zombie (aka Robert Bartleh Cummings) - Born 1965, turns 52 - Producer | Director | Writer | Actor | Singer | Songwriter | Composer  
Friday 13th January
  • William B. Davis - Born 1938, turns 79 - Actor | Producer | Director | Writer | Editor
  • Bill Bailey - Born 1965, turns 52 - Writer | Actor | Television Personality | Singer | Composer
  • Patrick Dempsey - Born 1966, turns 51 - Actor | Producer | Director
  • Michael Pena - Born 1976, turns 41 - Actor | Producer
  • Orlando Bloom - Born 1977, turns 40 - Actor | Producer
  • Liam Hemsworth - Born 1990, turns 27 - Actor
  • Julia Louis-Dreyfus - Born 1961, turns 56 - Actress | Producer | Singer  
Saturday 14th January
  • Faye Dunaway - Born 1941, turns 76 - Actress
  • Emily Watson - Born 1967, turns 50 - Actress
  • Carl Weathers - Born 1948, turns 69 - Actor | Director
  • Steven Soderbergh - Born 1963, turns 54 - Producer | Director | Writer | Cinematographer | Editor
  • L.L.Cool J (aka James Todd Smith) - Born 1968, turns 49 - Actor | Producer | Singer | Songwriter
  • Jason Bateman - Born 1969, turns 48 - Actor | Producer | Director
Frances Rosemary Walsh was born in Wellington, on New Zealand's North Island, and she attended Wellington Girl's College where she had intentions on becoming a fashion designer, eventually gaining a more active interest in music. She performed from time to time in a Punk Band, named 'The Wallsockets' and attending the Victoria University of Wellington majoring in English Literature and graduating in 1981. 






She gained her first screen writing debut on the 1983 made for television film 'A Woman of Good Character' which she followed up with scripts for the TV show 'Worzel Gummidge Down Under'. Walsh met up with a young Peter Jackson during the mid-'80's whilst he was putting the final touches to his debut feature - the 1987 splatter Sci-Fi horror comedy film 'Bad Taste'. Jackson's next film was the musical black comedy 'Meet the Feebles' released in 1989 which was the first film for Jackson that Walsh collaborated on taking a Co-Writer credit. In the meantime, Walsh had married Jackson in 1987 and the two have been partners ever since, at home and at work. Following this the two joined forces on the slapstick splatter zombie horror film 'Braindead' (released as 'Dead Alive' in the US) which Walsh also gained a screen writing credit for. Although the film was a critical and commercial dud upon release in 1992, it has since risen to the ranks of cult status.

In 1994 Walsh and Jackson explored new territory with the dramatic true story of the notorious 1954 Parker-Hulme murder case with 'Heavenly Creatures' which Walsh and Jackson Co-Wrote. The film features Kate Winslet's screen debut as Juliet Hulme in which her obsessive relationship with close teenage friend Pauline Parker result in them killing Parker's mother in 1954. The film was critically acclaimed picking up seventeen award wins and a further fourteen nominations including an Oscar nod for Best Original Screenplay.

Next up was more familiar territory with the horror comedy 'The Frighteners' in 1996 starring Michael J. Fox in his last lead role in a live action feature film after being diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease in 1991 aged just 29, and going public with it in 1998. Walsh and Jackson again Co-Wrote the Screenplay which Jackson Directed and Co-Produced, and it represented their first film with the backing of a major American studio. With so many ghosts appearing in the film, 'The Frighteners' was one of the most digital effects laden films up until that time, and proved to be a testing ground for Jackson's Weta Digital that had been in business just there years then. Walsh took an Associate Producer credit on the film too.

With Jackson looking at the fantasy genre for his next offering, in 1998 New Line Cinema agreed to back financially a trilogy adapted from Tolkien's classic books - 'The Lord of the Rings'. For the trilogy Walsh took Screenwriting credits, Producer credits and composer credits for certain songs appearing on the soundtrack for each film. The three films  - 'The Fellowship of the Ring', 'The Two Towers' and 'The Return of the King' were made for a combined US$281M and took an overall Box Office haul of US$2.91B. Additionally, the films received a collective 415 award wins and another 362 nominations including seventeen Academy Award wins in total. 

Following their success with 'The Rings Trilogy' Walsh and Jackson turned their attention back to a project they first muted in 1998 with Universal Studios - that of a remake of 'King Kong'. In 2005 Universal greenlit a remake of 'King Kong' with no hesitation, and so Walsh and Jackson took co-Writer and Co-Producer credits while Jackson Directed. The film cost US$207M to make and grossed US$551M at the global Box Office and starred Naomi Watts as Ann Darrow and Andy Serkis as Kong in motion capture. It picked up three Academy Award wins plus 39 other wins and 92 nominations.

'The Lovely Bones' followed in 2009 - a supernatural drama film based on the best selling novel of the same name from 2002 by Alice Sebold. Again Jackson Directed with Walsh and he carrying Co-Producer and Co-Screenwriting credits too. The film received mixed critical reviews but still picked up an Oscar nod, a Golden Globe nod and two BAFTA nods from its haul of ten award wins and forty other nominations, and it made back US$94M from its US$65M budget outlay.

Based on their prior success with 'The Rings Trilogy' it was almost inevitable that eventually Walsh and Jackson would turn attention to Tolkien's other notable works - 'The Hobbit'. Originally slated to be Directed by Guillermo del Toro over two instalments, Jackson stepped up to the Director's chair when del Toro exited stage left due to creative differences, and decided that three films was the go, however, del Toro still received a Screenwriters credit on all there films for his efforts. Once more Walsh and Jackson Co-Produced, Co-Scripted the works on 'The Hobbit' series, with Jackson Directing also. The three films were made for a combined US$690M and collectively took US$2.94B at the global Box Office, together with 31 award wins and  another 202 nominations.

Next up for Fran Walsh is the big screen adaptation of the Philip Reeve Sci-Fi steampunk novel of 2001 'Mortal Engines', the first in a series of four books. Co-Produced and Co-Written once again by Walsh and Jackson, this time Directed by Christian Rivers, the film is slated to hit our screens in December 2018 and is currently in pre-production.

All up Walsh has seventeen Screenwriting credits to her name, twelve as Producer, and seven Soundtrack credits as writer/lyricist on 'The Lord of the Rings' and 'The Hobbit' films. She has so far amassed forty-four award wins, including three Academy Awards wins, one Golden Globe win, and two BAFTA wins, plus a further 57 nominations, including four Academy Award nods, and five BAFTA nods. It should be noted too that Walsh and Jackson have collaborated with Philippa Boyens on all their films since the 'The Rings Trilogy' and obviously shared in their collective success as Co-Writers and Co-Producers on all film projects including the upcoming 'Mortal Engines'. With Jackson she has two children, Katie (born in 1996) and Billie (born in 1995).

Fran Walsh - very private outside of the film making public eye, but one half of a truly great film production and scriptwriting family that has a proven track record dating back thirty years backed up by immense critical acclaim and huge commercial success with the accolades between them to prove it, and cement their places in cinema history. For your work behind the scenes that is so important to what we see on screen, Happy Birthday to you Fran, from Odeon Online.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Saturday, 24 September 2016

Birthday's to share this week : 25th September-1st October 2016

Do you celebrate your Birthday this week?

Naomi Watts does on 28th September - check out my tribute to this Birthday Girl turning 48, at the end of this feature.

Do you also share your birthday with a well known, highly regarded & famous Actor or Actress; share your special day with a Director, Producer, Writer, Cinematographer, Singer/Songwriter or Composer of repute; or share an interest in whoever might notch up another year in the coming seven days? Then, look no further! Whilst there will be too many to mention in this small but not insignificant and beautifully written and presented Blog, here are the more notable and noteworthy icons of the big screen, and the small screen, that you will recognise, and that you might just share your birthday with in the week ahead. If so, Happy Birthday to you from Odeon Online!

Sunday 25th September
  • Heather Locklear - Born 1961, turns 55 - Actress | Producer
  • Catherine Zeta-Jones - Born 1969, turns 47 - Actress | Singer
  • Michael Douglas - Born 1944, turns 72 - Actor | Producer
  • Pedro Almodovar - Born 1949, turns 67 - Director | Producer | Writer | Singer | Songwriter
  • Mark Hamill - Born 1951, turns 65 - Actor | Producer | Singer
  • Michael Madsen - Born 1958, turns 58 - Actor | Producer | Writer
  • Jason Flemyng - Born 1966, turns 50 - Actor | Producer | Director
  • Will Smith - Born 1968, turns 48 - Actor | Producer | Writer | Singer | Songwriter  
Monday 26th September
  • Jim Caviezel - Born 1968, turns 48 - Actor
  • Linda Hamilton - Born 1956, turns 60 - Actress
  • Olivia Newton-John - Born 1948, turns 68 - Singer | Songwriter | Actress  
Tuesday 27th September
  • Gwyneth Paltrow - Born 1972, turns 44 - Actress | Producer | Singer
  • Denis Lawson - Born 1947, turns 69 - Actor | Writer | Director
  • Meat Loaf (aka Marvin or Michael Lee Aday)- Born 1947, turns 69 - Singer | Actor | Producer  
Wednesday 28th September
  • Brigitte Bardot - Born 1934, turns 82 - Actress | Singer
  • Mira Sorvino - Born 1967, turns 49 - Actress | Producer
  • Naomi Watts - Born 1968, turns 48 - Actress | Producer
  • Hilary Duff - Born 1987, turns 29 - Actress | Producer | Singer | Songwriter  
Thursday 29th September
  • Ian McShane - Born 1942, turns 74 - Actor | Producer
  • Luke Goss - Born 1968, turns 48 - Actor | Writer | Producer | Director | Singer | Songwriter
  • Nicolas Winding Refn - Born 1970, turns 46 - Director | Producer | Writer  
Friday 30th September
  • Ezra Miller - Born 1992, turns 24 - Actor
  • Eric Stoltz - Born 1961, turns 55 - Actor | Producer | Director 
  • Ian Ogilvy - Born 1943, turns 73 - Actor
  • Angie Dickinson - Born 1931, turns 85 - Actress
  • Victoria Tennant - Born 1950, turns 66 - Actress | Producer
  • Fran Drescher - Born 1957, turns 59 - Actress | Writer | Producer | Director
  • Monica Bellucci - Born 1964, turns 52 - Actress
  • Marion Cotillard - Born 1975, turns 41 - Actress | Singer  
Saturday 1st October
  • Brie Larson - Born 1989, turns 27 - Actress | Writer | Producer | Director
  • Julie Andrews - Born 1935, turns 81 - Actress | Producer | Singer
  • Randy Quaid - Born 1950, turns 66 - Actor | Producer
  • Zach Galifianakis - Born 1969, turns 47 - Actor | Producer | Writer
  • Tom Hooper - Born 1972, turns 44 - Director | Producer | Writer  
Naomi Ellen Watts was born in Shoreham, Kent, England to mother Myfanwy Roberts - a dealer in antiques and latterly a costume/set designer for film and television, and father Peter Watts who died at age 30 of an apparent heroin overdose. He was a sound engineer and road manager for British progressive rock band Pink Floyd. Her parents divorced when the young Watts was just four years of age, and within three years her father was dead. The family, including older brother Ben then moved to North Wales where she attended Ysgol Gyfun Llangefni. Three or so years later her mother remarried and the family moved to Suffolk, in East Anglia where she attended the Thomas Mills High School. In 1980 she saw the hit song and dance film 'Fame' and seeing her mother perform live on stage cemented a career as an Actress in Naomi's mind. At age fourteen the family relocated to Sydney, Australia where mother Myfanwy established a career in the film and television business. Taking acting lessons and attending auditions she met up, and became good friends with young Nicole Kidman. In Sydney she attended Mosman High School and then North Sydney Girls High School, but failing to graduate she worked sundry jobs to pay her way. At eighteen she had a brief time with a modelling agency which proved unsuccessful. She then took part in a drama workshop by chance invitation, which reignited her interest in acting.

Watts secured her screen debut in the 1986 Australian film 'For Love Alone' Directed by Stephen Wallace and starring Sam Neill, Hugo Weaving and Hugh Keays-Byrne. After a period of absence her next gig was on the long running Australian comedy series 'Hey Dad' in 1990, and then five episodes of the six part mini-series 'The Brides of Christ' in 1991. That same year was John Duigan's 'Flirting' with Noah Taylor, Nicole Kidman and Thandie Newton in this sequel to the 1987 'The Year My Voice Broke' and was critically acclaimed. She followed this up with nineteen episodes on the Australian weekday soap opera 'Home and Away' in 1991 as the handicapped character Julie Gibson. She then took a 'gap year' and travelled to the USA and through Nicole Kidman's network sought to secure more acting work.

This led to small roles in the likes of Joe Dante's 'Matinee' with John Goodman in 1993 and then a return to Australia for three in a row with 'Wide Sargasso Sea' for John Duigan again, 'The Custodian' with Hugo Weaving and Anthony LaPaglia, and 'Gross Misconduct' with Jimmy Smits. Returning to the US Watts struggled to gain any traction with her acting work and became increasingly frustrated by the US film and television making machine. Encouraged to stick with it by good friend Nicole Kidman, she won a support role in 'Tank Girl' with Lori Petty, Ice-T and Malcolm McDowell.

The rest of the 90's saw small parts in feature length and made for television movies including 'Persons Unknown', 'Under the Lighthouse Dancing', 'Dangerous Beauty', 'and 'Strange Planet'. There was also 'Sleepwalkers' - a short-lived nine episode SciFi mystery drama series with Bruce Greenwood, and then perhaps her breakout role in 1999's David Lynch Directed 'Mulholland Drive' with Justin Theroux. Originally intended as a made for television film pilot for an extended TV series, it was never picked up by the networks. When it wasn't, Lynch completed the deliberately open ended pilot with a conclusion which he filmed in late 2000 and turned that into a feature length film released in 2001 to critical acclaim, picking up 46 award wins and another 57 nominations - many for Lynch's Directing, but also numerous for Watt's performance.

The American English language remake of the Japanese horror 'Ringu' with 2002's 'The Ring' receive further critical and commercial success with Watts in the lead role as investigative journalist Rachel Keller. Watts reprised her role in the 2005 follow up 'The Ring Two', but not the 2016 third film in the franchise 'Rings' still yet to be released but due before the end  of the year. The Australian bio-pic 'Ned Kelly' for Director Gregor Jordan with Heath Ledger in the title role alongside Orlando Bloom, Geoffrey Rush and Joel Edgerton came in 2003, as did 'La Divorce', and the highly praised '21 Grams' for Alejandro G. Inarritu with Sean Penn and Benicio del Toro picking up 29 award wins and 73 nominations including an Oscar nod for Best Actress in a Leading Role for Watts.

'We Don't Live Here Anymore' with Mark Ruffalo, 'The Assassination of Richard Nixon' with Sean Penn, 'I Heart Huckabees' with Dustin Hoffman, 'Ellie Parker', 'Stay' with Ewan McGregor, and Peter Jackson's 'King Kong' remake with Adrien Brody and Jack Black in 2005 saw Watts playing the role of Ann Darrow made famous by Fay Wray in the 1933 version of the film. Jackson's film was another critical and commercial success story making US$550M from a US$207M budget and earning 45 award wins and another 92 nominations. For the balance of the decade highlights were David Cronenberg's 'Eastern Promises' with Viggo Mortensen, 'Funny Games' with Tim Roth, and 'The International' with Clive Owen.

The new decade kicked off in 2010 with Woody Allen's 'You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger', then Doug Liman's 'Fair Game' with Sean Penn again, Jim Sheridan's 'Dream Home' with Daniel Craig, Clint Eastwood's 'J. Edgar' with Leonardo DiCaprio, 'The Impossible' with Ewan McGregor again, 'Diana' as Princess Diana Spencer, and then Alejandro G. Inarritu's 'Birdman, or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance' with Michael Keaton which garnered 186 award wins and another 265 award nominations. 'St. Vincent' followed in 2014 with 'While We're Young' with Ben Stiller, 'The Sea of Trees' with Matthew McConaughey, 'About Ray' and 'Demolition' with Jake Gyllenhaal bringing us up to date, save for her reprised role as Evelyn in 'Insurgent', 'Allegiant' and the 2017 release of 'Ascendant' - the final film in the 'Divergent' series.

Next up is 'The Bleeder' with Liev Schreiber, 'Shut In' due later this year, 'The Glass Castle' with Brie Larson currently filming, 'The Book of Henry' now completed filming, new television series 'Gypsy' with Billy Crudup, and the series return of the highly acclaimed 'Twin Peaks' in 2017. Australian animated outback adventure 'Larrikins' for Tim Minchin for which Watts is lending her voice talents is currently filming for a 2018 release, and 'Ophelia' has been recently announced also for 2018 too.

All up Watts has 76 acting credits to her name and nine as Producer. To date, she has amassed 52 award wins and another 81 nominations including two Academy Award, one Golden Globe and one BAFTA nod for her work on '21 Grams' and 'The Impossible'. Watts was romantically linked to Heath Ledger from 2002 until 2004, and then Liev Schreiber since 2005 with whom she has two boys - Alexander Pete (born in 2007) and Samuel Kai (born in 2008). In 2006, she became a goodwill ambassador for the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, and has supported many associated initiatives in the ensuing years.

Naomi Watts - considers herself as much Australian as English; good friends with Nicole Kidman, Simon Baker, Sean Penn, Kate Hudson, Mark Ruffalo et al; has worked with the best Actors and Directors in the business; has worked across just about every genre; has been voted on numerous 'Top Lists' in the last fifteen years; practices yoga, Brazilian jiu-jitsu and is vegetarian; and continues to surprise and delight us with her film choices and her performances. Happy Birthday to you Naomi, from Odeon Online.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Saturday, 16 April 2016

Birthday's to share this week : 17th-23rd April 2016.

Do you celebrate your Birthday this week?

Andy Serkis does on 20th April - check out my tribute to this Birthday Boy turning 52, at the end of this feature.

Do you also share your birthday with a well known, highly regarded & famous Actor or Actress; share your special day with a Director, Producer, Writer, Cinematographer, Singer/Songwriter or Composer of repute; or share an interest in whoever might notch up another year in the coming seven days? Then, look no further! Whilst there will be too many to mention in this small but not insignificant and beautifully written and presented Blog, here are the more notable and noteworthy icons of the big screen, and the small screen, that you will recognise, and that you might just share your birthday with in the week ahead. If so, Happy Birthday to you from Odeon Online!

Sunday 17th April
  • Rooney Mara - Born 1985, turns 31 - Actress | Producer  
  • Olivia Hussey - Born 1951, turns 65 - Actress
  • Jennifer Garner - Born 1972, turns 44 - Actress | Producer
  • Nick Hornby - Born 1957, turns 59 - Writer | Producer
  • Sean Bean - Born 1959, turns 57 - Actor | Producer 
Monday 18th April
  • Eli Roth - Born 1972, turns 44 - Actor | Writer | Producer | Director  
  • Eric Roberts - Born 1956, turns 60 - Actor
  • David Tennant - Born 1971, turns 45 - Actor
  • Edgar Wright - Born 1974, turns 42 - Producer | Director | Writer | Actor
  • Rick Moranis - Born 1953, turns 63 - Actor | Producer | Writer
  • James Woods - Born 1947, turns 69 - Actor | Producer  
Tuesday 19th April
  • James Franco - Born 1978, turns 38 - Actor | Writer | Producer | Director
  • Tim Curry - Born 1946, turns 70 - Actor | Singer
  • Hayden Christensen - Born 1981, turns 35 - Actor | Producer
  • Kate Hudson - Born 1979, turns 37 - Actress
  • Ashley Judd - Born 1968, turns 48 - Actress | Producer   
Wednesday 20th April
  • Jessica Lange - Born 1949, turns 67 - Actress  
  • Andy Serkis - Born 1964, turns 52 - Actor | Producer | Director
  • Michael Brandon - Born 1945, turns 71 - Actor
  • Ryan O'Neal - Born 1941, turns 75 - Actor | Producer
  • George Takei - Born 1937, turns 79 - Actor
  • Leslie Phillips - Born 1924, turns 92 - Actor | Producer  
Thursday 21st April
  • James McAvoy - Born 1979, turns 37 - Actor | Producer  
  • Tony Danza - Born 1951, turns 65 - Actor | Producer
  • Charles Grodin - Born 1935, turns 81 - Actor | Writer
  • Andie MacDowell - Born 1958, turns 58 - Actress | Producer
  • Gugu Mbatha-Raw - Born 1983, turns 33 - Actress  
Friday 22nd April
  • Amber Heard - Born 1986, turns 30 - Actress  
  • Jeffrey Dean Morgan - Born 1966, turns 50 - Actor
  • John Waters - Born 1946, turns 70 - Writer | Producer | Director | Actor
  • Lee Tamahori - Born 1950, turns 66 - Director
  • Jack Nicholson - Born 1937, turns 79 - Actor | Producer | Director | Writer
Saturday 23rd April
  • Michael Moore - Born 1954, turns 62 - Writer | Producer | Director  
  • Dev Patel - Born 1990, turns 26 - Actor
  • John Cena - Born 1977, turns 39 - Actor | WWF Wrestler | Television Personality
  • John Hannah - Born 1962, turns 54 - Actor | Producer
  • Lee Majors - Born 1939, turns 77 - Actor | Producer
  • Judy Davis - Born 1955, turns 61 - Actress
Andrew Clement Serkis was born and raised in Ruislip Manor, Middlesex, England to mother Lylie Weech - a teacher of disabled children and father Clement Serkis - an Iraqi gynaecologist of Armenian descent. His father often returned to the Middle East to work while he was growing up, and the young Serkis would often holiday in those Middle Eastern lands with his siblings during their younger years. He attended St. Benedict's School - a co-educational independent Catholic School in the London suburb of Ealing. Open leaving school, Serkis attended Lancaster University and studied visual arts with the aim of designing posters. As a member of the University's County College and student radio station, he joined a studio to get involved in play design and production. Toward the end of his first year, he agreed to act in several productions and was so taken by acting that he changed his major subject to acting. In his third year he joined the local playhouse to gain his Equity Card and upon graduation joined as an Actor, working in a diverse range of stage productions from the classics including Shakespeare right through to the modern day contemporary playwrights.

His small screen debut came in 1989 in a couple of episodes of 'The New Statesman' with Rik Mayall, with the next eight years or so taken up with appearances in a string of television series including 'Streetwise', 'The Darling Buds of May', 'The Bill', 'Grushko', 'Finney' and 'Kavagnah QC'.

In 1994 he took a small role in 'Royal Deceit' - a retelling of 'Hamlet' with Gabriel Byrne, Christian Bale, Brian Cox, Tom Wilkinson and Helen Mirren. The mid-90's continued with smaller fare including 'The Near Room', 'Stella Does Tricks', 'Career Girls' for Director Mike Leigh, 'Loop' and 'Among Giants' with Rachel Griffiths and Pete Postlethwaite. 'Sweety Barret' with Brandan Gleeson and Mike Leigh's 'Topsy Turvey' saw out the decade with Jim Broadbent, Timothy Spall and Dexter Fletcher. In the meantime , there were further television series appearances with the likes of 'Jump', 'Touching Evil' and 'Oliver Twist' in which Serkis plays Bill Sikes.

2000 kicked off with 'The Jolly Boys Last Stand', Julien Temple's 'Pandaemonium' with John Hannah, Linus Roache and Dexter Fletcher, 'Shiner' with Michael Caine and Martin Landau, and 'Five Seconds to Spare' with Ray Winstone.

The turning point came for Serkis in 2001 with the release of Peter Jackson's 'The Lord of the Rings : The Fellowship of the Ring' in which he appears as Smeagol/Gollum through cutting edge Motion Capture technology as it was back then, and as the voice of the character. Serkis received much critical acclaim for his role although his performance did begin a debate over the legitimacy of CGI supported acting and whether this was therefore award worthy. And in some quarters it was, and in others not so! He reprised the character in all its Mo-Cap CGI glory in both successive films 'Lord of the Rings : The Two Towers' and 'Lord of the Rings : The Return of the King'.

In the meantime there was '24 Hour Party People', 'The Escapist', 'Deathwatch', '13 Going On 30' and 'Blessed' before his Mo-Cap skills were summonsed once again by Peter Jackson on 2005's 'King Kong' remake with Serkis playing the giant ape of the film's title. As the latter half of the decade wore on Christopher Nolan's 'The Prestige', 'Longford', 'Extraordinary Rendition', 'Sugarhouse', 'The Cottage', 'Einstein and Eddington', 'Inkheart' before his turn as the polio affected rock musician Ian Dury in the 'Sex and Drugs and Rock and Roll' biopic of 2010.

That same year a remake of the classic Graham Greene novel and film of 1947, 'Brighton Rock'  co-starring with Helen Mirren and John Hurt was released, with 'Burke & Hare' and Serkis and Simon Pegg playing the title historical characters.

Returning to Mo-Cap again Serkis portrayed super intelligent chimpanzee 'Caesar' in the reboot of the classic 60's and 70's film franchise - 'Planet of the Apes' with the first instalment 'Rise of the Planet of the Apes', a role he would again reprise in 2014 in 'Dawn of the Planet of the Apes' and again currently filming 'War for the Planet of the Apes' due in 2017.

Meanwhile 'Death of a Superhero', 'Wild Bill' for Dexter Fletcher, and more Mo-Cap with Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson in the CGI animated 'The Adventures of Tintin' with Serkis lending his voice to Captain Haddock, which he is set to do another two times with 'The Adventures of Tintin : Prisoners of the Sun' announced, and a third instalment as yet untitled.







He returned to the Gollum character once more for Peter Jackson in 2012 with 'The Hobbit : An Unexpected Journey' before 'The Avengers : Age of Ultron' as Ulysses Klaue - a role he'll reprise too in late 2017's 'The Black Panther'. Last up we saw Serkis as Supreme Leader Snoke in 'Star Wars : Episode VII - The Force Awakens'  - a role he also reprise in 'Episode VIII' which is currently filming.

Also in the works is his Directorial debut with the Warner Bros. adaptation of 'Jungle Book' due for release originally in October 2016, then shifted back to October 2017, and now slated for release in October 2018. With an all star cast that includes Christian Bale, Benedict Cumberbatch and Cate Blanchett, Serkis will also star as Baloo, as well as Produce through his own Production Company 'The Imaginarium Studios' based in Ealing, London which he established to further progress performance capture technology in film making.

All up, Serkis has 92 acting credits to his name, three Producer credits and one as Director. He has also lent his voice talents to to the likes of 'Lord of the Rings' and 'The Hobbit', 'Tintin', 'The Simpsons', 'Flushed Away', 'Arthur Christmas' and several video game characters. He has thirty award wins and another 42 nominations. He married Actress Lorraine Ashbourne in July 2002 with whom he has three children - Ruby (born in 1998), Sonny (born in 2000) and Louis (born in 2004). He is an accomplished painter and a keen mountaineer, and a supporter of The Hope Foundation.



Andy Serkis - the Motion Capture go to guy . . . anywhere and for everything; better known for your CGI characters that the real life humans you portray - 'Tintin', 'Gollum', 'Caesar', 'Snoke' and 'Kong'; is certainly multi-talented and increasingly sought after and in demand; and you would probably not recognise him unless you are in the know - but Andy - keep blazing a trail, we love you for it and the characters you bring so convincingly to life - Happy Birthday to you from Odeon Online.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Saturday, 7 March 2015

Birthday's to share this week : 8th - 14th March 2015.

Do you celebrate your Birthday this week?

Jamie Bell does on 14th March - check out the tribute to this Birthday Boy turning 29, at the end of this feature.

Do you also share your birthday with a well known, highly regarded & famous Actor or Actress; share your special day with a Director, Producer, Writer, Cinematographer, Singer/Songwriter or Composer of repute; or share an interest in whoever might notch up another year in the coming seven days? Then, look no further! Whilst there will be too many to mention in this small but not insignificant and beautifully written and presented Blog, here are the more notable and noteworthy icons of the big screen, and the small screen, that you will recognise, and that you might just share your birthday with in the week ahead. If so, Happy Birthday to you from Odeon Online!

Sunday 8th March
  • Aidan Quinn - Born 1959, turns 56 - Actor
  • Micky Dolenz - Born 1945, turns 70 - Singer | Songwriter | Producer | Director | Writer | Actor
  • James Van Der Beek - Born 1977, turns 38 - Actor
  • Freddie Prinze Jnr. - Born 1976, turns 39 - Actor | Producer | Writer
Monday 9th March
  • Oscar Isaac - Born 1980, turns 35 - Actor
  • Juliette Binoche - Born 1964, turns 51 - Actress
Tuesday 10th March
  • Olivia Wilde - Born 1984, turns 31 - Actress | Producer
  • Sharon Stone - Born 1958, turns 57 - Actress | Producer
  • John Hamm - Born1971, turns 34 - Actor | Producer | Director
  • Chuck Norris - Born 1940, turns 75 - Actor | Producer | Writer
  • Paul Haggis - Born 1953, turns 62 - Director | Producer | Writer
Wednesday 11th March
  • Terrence Howard - Born 1969, turns 46 - Actor | Producer
  • Johnny Knoxville - Born 1971, turns 44 - Actor | Producer | Writer
  • Peter Berg - Born 1964, turns 51 - Director | Producer | Writer | Actor
  • Jerry Zucker - Born 1950, turns 65 - Director | Producer | Writer
Thursday 12th March
  • Aaron Eckhart - Born 1968, turns 47 - Actor | Producer
  • Liza Minelli - Born 1946, turns 69 - Actress | Singer
Friday 13th March
  • Common - Born 1972, turns 43 - Actor | Producer | Singer | Songwriter
  • Emile Hirsch - Born 1985, turns 30 - Actor | Singer | Songwriter
  • William H. Macy - Born 1950, turns 65 - Actor | Writer | Producer | Director
Saturday 14th March
  • Michael Caine - Born 1933, turns 82 - Actor | Producer
  • Billy Crystal - Born 1948, turns 67 - Actor | Producer | Director | Writer | Singer
  • Quincy Jones - Born 1933, turns 82 - Singer | Songwriter | Composer | Producer
  • Wolfgang Petersen - Born 1941, turns 74 - Director | Producer | Writer
  • Jamie Bell - Born 1986, turns 29 - Actor
  • Ansel Elgort - Born 1994, turns 21 - Actor
Andrew James Matfin 'Jamie' Bell was born in Billingham, County Durham, England to mother Eileen Matfin and father John Bell, a toolmaker, who left his wife Eileen before Jamie was born. Jamie has an older sister Cathryn. The young Jamie Bell was a pupil at the co-educational Northfields School in Billingham, and his involvement with dance began when he accompanied his sister to her ballet class, and was eventually invited in to the class to take part.Whilst at school he also attended the Stagecoach Theatre Arts School - a global franchise providing training in dance, acting and singing to children aged 4-18. He was a member too of the National Youth Music Theatre.

His screen debut is the stuff of legend with his first role on film and television came with 2000's 'Billy Elliott' for which he was chose from 2000 hopefuls over seven different auditions. Director Stephen Daldry was looking for a young lad who could act, dance and carry the required northern English accent - and he found this in Bell.The film won 57 awards worldwide and a further 62 nominations - including three Academy Award nominations, two Golden Globe nominations, the BAFTA for Bell for Best Lead Actor and two other BAFTA wins and another nine nominations. Bell won fifteen awards for his role as Billy Elliott. The film cost just US$5M to make and grossed in the final analysis US$109M - a bona fide success on all levels!

Later that same year he starred in a single episode of televisions 'Close & True'. His next big screen appearance was in the 2002 British horror film 'Deathwatch' with Andy Serkis, and also that year an adaptation of the Charles Dickens book 'Nicholas Nickleby' which included amongst others Timothy Spall, Jim Broadbent and Anne Hathaway. 'Undertow' came next in 2004 with Dermot Mulroney and Josh Lucas, and then three films in 2005 with 'Dear Wendy', 'The Chumscrubber' and Peter Jackson's remake of 'King Kong' with Andy Serkis again and Naomi Watts and Jack Black.

2006 brought another offering with big time Acting and Directing legend Clint Eastwood in 'Flags of our Fathers'. 'Hallam Foe' came along in 2007 with the Doug Liman Directed 'Jumper' in 2008 with Hayden Christensen, and then 'Defiance' for Edward Zwick with co-star Daniel Craig.

In 2011 we saw Bell in Kevin Macdonald's 'The Eagle' with Channing Tatum, 'Jane Eyre' with Mia Wasikowska, another British horror offering with 'The Retreat' and then with Steven Spielberg for 'The Adventures of Tintin' providing the voice of Tintin, alongside Andy Serkis and Daniel Craig once more. 'Man on a Ledge' came in 2012, 'Snowpiercer' in 2013 and 'Filth' that same year too, and Lars von Trier's 'Nymphomaniac : Vol II' also.

In 2014 he starred in the American period war drama television series 'Turn : Washington's Spies' now in its second season. Currently in post-production is the Marvel reboot of 'Fantastic Four' with Bell playing the role of 'The Thing' with this film due out later this year, with 'The Fantastic Four 2' announced recently for a 2017 release. In between time there will also be 'The Adventures of Tintin : Prisoner's of the Sun' in 2016 with Director Peter Jackson once more and Bell reprising his role as Tintin in providing his voice talents.


He started dating American Actress Evan Rachael Wood in 2005 but the two split in twelve months later. In 2011 the two rekindled their flame and in late October 2012 they married . . . but announced their separation in mid-2014. They have a son together born in July 2013.

Bell has sixteen award wins and seventeen other nominations to his name, from 26 acting credits so far. Only he and Christian Bale have won the Outstanding Performance by a Young Actor Award from the US National Board of Review.

Jamie Bell - still only 29 and so much achieved! Describing yourself as the Eminem of Northeast England, and not delusional, knowing that you are only 5'7" tall with slightly jug ears you nonetheless continue to make you mark with years of opportunity ahead with which to surprise and delight your audience - Happy Birthday to you, from Odeon Online.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-