Title: Amigo: Trailer

Director: John Sayles

Cast: Garret Dillahunt, Chris Cooper, DJ Qualls, Lucas Neff, Dane DeHaan

Synopsis: Watch the Amigo trailer. A fictional account of events during the Philippine-American War.

Genre: Action & Adventure


Amigo: Trailer – Watch more Movie Trailers

 

Title: John Carter of Mars: Trailer

Director: Andrew Stanton

Cast: Lynn Collins, Taylor Kitsch, Mark Strong, Willem Dafoe, Dominic West

Synopsis: Watch the John Carter of Mars trailer. Civil War vet John Carter is transplanted to Mars, where he discovers a lush, wildly diverse planet whose main inhabitants are 12-foot tall green barbarians

Genre: Action & Adventure

 

 


John Carter of Mars: Trailer – Watch more Movie Trailers

 

Title: Conan the Barbarian – Trailer

Director: Marcus Nispel

Cast: Jason Momoa

Synopsis: Watch the Conan The Barbarian Trailer. The tale of Conan the Cimmerian and his adventures across the continent of Hyboria on a quest to avenge the murder of his father and the slaughter of his village.

Genre: Action & Adventure


Conan the Barbarian – Trailer – Watch more Movie Trailers

 

Title: The Last Circus – Trailer

Director: Álex de la Iglesia

Cast: Santiago Segura, Antonio de la Torre, Fernando Guillén Cuervo, Fran Perea, Sancho Gracia

Synopsis: Watch The Last Circus Trailer.

Genre: Action & Adventure


The Last Circus – Trailer – Watch more Movie Trailers

 

Title: The Walking Dead: Season 2 Trailer

Director: Frank Darabont

Cast: Jon Bernthal, Jeffrey DeMunn, Linds Edwards, Laurie Holden, Andrew Lincoln, Addy Miller, Sarah Wayne Callies

Synopsis: Watch The Walking Dead: Season 2 Trailer

Genre: Action & Adventure


The Walking Dead: Season 2 Trailer – Watch more Movie Trailers

 

Title: Cowboys & Aliens: Harrison Ford

Director: Jon Favreau

Cast: Daniel Craig, Harrison Ford, Olivia Wilde, Sam Rockwell, Paul Dano

Synopsis: Watch the Harrison Ford Profile for Cowboys & Aliens. A spaceship arrives in Arizona, 1873, to take over the Earth, starting with the Wild West region. A posse of cowboys are all that stand in their way.

Genre: Action & Adventure


Cowboys & Aliens: Harrison Ford – Watch more Movie Trailers

 

Title: Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame Trailer

Director: Hark Tsui

Cast: Andy Lau, Carina Lau, Bingbing Li, Tony Leung Ka Fai, Chao Deng

Synopsis: Watch the Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame Trailer. An exiled detective is recruited to solve a series of mysterious deaths that threaten to delay the inauguration of Empress Wu.

Genre: Action & Adventure


Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame Trailer – Watch more Movie Trailers

 

Title:  Bunraku Trailer

Director: Guy Moshe

Cast: Ron Perlman, Josh Hartnett, Demi Moore, Woody Harrelson, Kevin McKidd

Synopsis: Watch the Bunraku trailer. The story of a a young man who has spent his life searching for revenge only to find himself up against a bigger challenge than he originally bargained for. Watch the Bunraku trailer in 480p or 720p streaming online. Break.com delivers official movie trailers previews, teasers and clips in HD for all the hottest coming soon & theatrical releases including the Action/Adventure Bunraku

Genre: Action & Adventure


Bunraku Trailer – Watch more Movie Trailers

 

Here’s a bad movie with hardly a bad scene. How can that be? The construction doesn’t flow. The story doesn’t engage. The insistent flashbacks are distracting. The plot has problems it sidesteps. Yet here is a gifted cast doing what it’s asked to do. The failure is in the writing and editing.

The movie takes place in the same Queens police precinct in 1986 and 2002. The opening involves a reference to 9/11, but with no clear purpose. Back in 1986, Jonathan White (Jake Cherry) is a pre-adolescent who is chased into a housing project bathroom by two rampaging junkies, grabs a pistol and shoots them. From what we see, they were asking for it, and Jonathan was saving his own life. His best friend, Vinny (Brian Gilbert), witnesses it all.

Det. Charles Stanford (Al Pacino), Jonathan’s godfather and the police partner of his late father, is early on the scene, covers up for the boy, and tampers with evidence. Now 16 years pass, the adult Jonathan (Channing Tatum) is a cop in the same precinct, and anonymous letters are being sent to the editor of a neighborhood newspaper (Juliette Binoche) alleging that a top cop was involved in the cover-up of two homicides.

What he did when he was young now gnaws at Jonathan. The letters gnaw at his commanding officer, Capt. Marion Mathers (Ray Liotta). Jonathan’s wife, Kerry (Katie Holmes), can see her husband coming apart at the seams. Like all cops in police movies, he won’t confide in her. As the letters continue, Jonathan grows convinced they must come from the only witness, the adult Vinny (Tracy Morgan), and he is willing to consider murdering his estranged friend.

Fair enough. Were you clocking the names of that incredible cast? The ringer is Binoche, who seems oddly cast as the only employee of a storefront newspaper. Of course a woman from France could end up with such a job, but no point is made of her origins, nor do we understand why her paper devotes front page headlines to anonymous scrawled notes. Every paper receives many such messages and has excellent reasons for not printing them.

But here’s another problem. Jonathan was a minor when the deaths occurred. They were in self-defense. A kid his age isn’t likely to go looking for junkies to shoot. The Pacino character knows this, and the right thing to do would be to see that charges are dropped and the minor’s name was suppressed. The only chargeable crime committed is his own — suppressing evidence. Another small difficulty is that if Vinny is the source of the notes, why would he be concerned 16 years later about actions protecting his blameless best friend?

These questions do not find answers. Instead, good actors circle them in a series of scenes that lead nowhere, and the final scenes end everything without concluding anything, if you see what I mean. Moment by moment, “Son of No One,” written and directed by Dino Montiel, seems to be adding up, but its drama and urgency are without purpose.

 

If it had provided me with nothing else, “Tower Heist” would have afforded me the sight of a solid gold automobile being lowered from the penthouse of the Trump Tower with Matthew Broderick dangling from it. Sometimes you appreciate such simple human spectacles. To be sure, Trump Tower has been renamed “The Tower,” and the man dangling from the car isn’t the Donald, but this is an imperfect world.

This isn’t a great heist movie for a lot of reasons, beginning with the stupidity of its heist plan and the impossibility of these characters ever being successful at anything more complex than standing in line. There also is the problem with Ben Stiller being cast as the hero: He was born to play the victim of heists, not the gang leader. He’s going against type. The victim here is played by Alan Alda, who is so loathsome he’d make a dartboard for OWS parties.

Quibble, quibble. The movie is broad and clumsy, and the dialogue cannot be described as witty, but a kind of grandeur creeps into the screenplay by Ted Griffin and Jeff Nathanson. It’s the kind of story where the executives at a pitch meeting feel they’re being bludgeoned over the head with box-office dollars. There is also the novelty that here is a comedy that doesn’t go heavy on the excremental, the masturbatory and symphonies of four-letter words. It’s funny in an innocent screwball kind of way.

The story: Josh Kovacs (Ben Stiller) is the perfectionist building manager at the most luxurious condo skyscraper in New York, which providentially is on Columbus Circle, in the exact footprint of Trump Tower. His team works flawlessly, beginning with the beloved doorman Lester (Stephen Henderson). The penthouse is owned by Arthur Shaw (Alan Alda), a financial wheeler-dealer, whose walls display priceless modern art. His most prized possession is a bright red 1953 Ferrari, once owned by Steve McQueen. It was taken apart piece by piece, he explains to FBI agent Claire Denham (Tea Leoni), and assembled there.

The FBI is on the job because Shaw has been running a Ponzi scheme, and among his loot are the pension plan and investments of the tower’s employees. So dear old Lester and all the others are penniless. Enraged, Kovacs recruits a team to break into the apartment. They’re looking for a wall safe, but then discover Shaw’s Ferrari is solid gold: $65 million is hidden in plain sight. Obviously, this requires stealing the car from the penthouse, where there’s no door or elevator that can handle it.

The team: Lester, of course; Mr. Fitzhugh (Broderick), who is jobless, broke, has lost his family and being evicted from the building, ­and characters played by Casey Affleck, Michael Pena,Gabourey Sidibe (her second film since her Oscar nomination) as a Jamaican whose father would crack safes, and — well, Kovacs decides they need someone more familiar with crime and enlists Slide (Eddie Murphy), a loud-talking dude from the street in his neighborhood. Murphy, in his first role since 2009, is in full Eddie Murphy mode, with comic riffs and astonished double takes.

I won’t describe how they plan to get the car out of the building, especially as the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade is passing directly below. But let me share with you that I suffer from a fear of heights, and the last thing you could get me to do is stand next to an open window on an floor upper of a high-rise and try to reach out and grab a Ferrari. The notion that no one would notice a bright red car being lowered from the tower is preposterous, but realism is not the point. This movie would fall to pieces if it didn’t hurtle headlong through its absurdist plot without ever pausing for explanations.

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