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

Release Date: 2/7/2011 10:44:31 AM



 

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

Release Date: 9/30/2011 3:47:00 PM



 

Title: Battleship Premiere Trailer

Director: Peter Berg

Cast: Liam Neeson

Synopsis: Watch the Battleship trailer. A fleet of ships is forced to do battle with an armada of unknown origins in order to discover and thwart their destructive goals. Watch the Battleship 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 Battleship

Genre: Action & Adventure

Release Date: 5/18/2012 10:09:00 AM



 

Title: Strike Back

Director: TBA

Cast: Philip Winchester, Sullivan Stapleton

Synopsis: Showtime Original Series

Genre: Action & Adventure

Release Date: 10/14/2011 12:57:00 AM


Strike Back – Watch more Movie Trailers

 

Title: Suing the Devil Trailer

Director: Tim Chey

Cast: Malcom McDowell

Synopsis: Watch the Suing The Devil trailer. A down-and-out law student sues Satan for $8 trillion dollars. Satan appears to defend himself and the trial of the century takes place.

Genre: Action & Adventure

Release Date: 7/29/2011 2:46:00 PM



 

Title: The Avengers: Trailer

Director: Joss Whedon

Cast: Chris Hemsworth, Scarlett Johannson

Synopsis: Watch the Avengers trailer!

Genre: Action & Adventure

Release Date: 5/4/2012 10:29:00 AM



 
sleeplessnight gunpointphotoFFrtsr1 Review : Sleepless Night

Hey it’s Tim from The Golden Briefcase, here to drop off the first few audio reviews from Fantastic Fest 2011 in Austin, TX. The fest is well underway and Jeremy and myself are already hitting the festival with guns blazing. Two of the films we were looking forward to were Frédéric Jardin’s French thrillerSleepless Night and Tom Six’s controversial sequel The Human Centipede 2 (Full Sequence), the latter being the subject of Jeremy’s morbid curiosity. The opening night, Thursday, showed both of these flicks and we were eager to give everyone at home a taste of what we thought! Listen to quick audio reviews with guests.

First up, Sleepless Night was a very pleasant surprise for both of us. The film got some very positive buzz out of TIFF and it seemed like a great way to kick off the festival with its contained and action-packed story. We both really enjoyed it for its brisk pace and its nightclub setting. It has some of the coolest action scenes I’ve seen in recent years, a kitchen fight being a highlight for both of us. We took a few moments to chat about it with Germain Lussier (@GermainLussier) from Slashfilm after the screening.

 

Emilio Estevez’s “The Way” was inspired by his son, stars his father, is dedicated to his grandfather, and was written and directed by himself. It’s a sweet and sincere family pilgrimage, even if a little too long and obvious. Audiences seeking uplift will find it here.

The story involves a California doctor named Tom (Martin Sheen), whose son Daniel dies while attempting to complete the Camino de Santiago (The Way of St. James), a centuries-old pilgrimage over Spanish mountain country to the Cathedral de Santiago. Daniel was apparently religious. Tom is definitely not. He flies to Spain to identify his son’s body, oversees its cremation and decides on the spot to scatter the ashes along the Way that Daniel planned to trek. In a nice touch, he even uses Daniel’s backpack and hiking gear.

Daniel (Estevez) appears to him from time to time, in visions or imagination, as Tom rethinks their relationship. That adds a touching, buried level to the story, because in real life, Estevez and his father are making the same journey in order to make this film. Their relationship has been as loyal and healthy as possible, in contrast to the family outrider, Charlie Sheen, who one cannot imagine walking three steps along this path.

A two-hour film of a surly man walking alone is not a promising idea. Although he prefers to keep his distance from others, Tom finds himself journeying with three other pilgrims. The most entertaining is Joost (Yorick van Wageningen), a cheerful Dutchman, who Tom does his best to ditch but keeps turning up, undiscouraged. Then there is Sarah (Deborah Kara Unger), an unhappily divorced woman from Canada, who looks rich in a way that hasn’t bought her happiness. And Jack (James Nesbitt), an Irish writer, who unfortunately embodies most of the garrulous jollity of the Irish and little of the wit and charm.

They are traversing beautiful country, which Estevez’s camera employs without postcard excesses, and along the way, they of course encounter colorful locals and fellow pilgrims, have some small adventures and (inevitably) nearly lose the container with the ashes. At the end, Tom has arrived at some sort of reconciliation with his son and forgiven him for having undertaken the damn fool pilgrimage in the first place.

That isn’t a lot to happen in a full-length film, and after a point, it begins to seem much of a muchness. Your response to it may depend on how receptive you are to the idea of the journey. Since both Sheen and Estevez are public about their Catholicism, I’m not sure what the point was of making Tom so firmly secular; perhaps so that even he, following so many centuries of footsteps, can sense some of their spirituality. “The Way” is a nice film. Not great, not urgent, but quietly positive.

 

“Real Steel” imagines a near future when human boxers have been replaced by robots. Well, why not? Matches between small fighting robot machines are popular enough to be on television, but in “Real Steel,” these robots are towering, computer-controlled machines with nimble footwork and instinctive balance. (In the real world, ‘bots can be rendered helpless on their backs, like turtles.) It also must be said that in color and design, the robots of “Real Steel” are glamorous and futuristic-retro enough to pose for the cover of Thrilling Wonder Stories.

The movie’s story, however, is not from the future but from the past, cobbling together Rocky’s rags-to-riches trajectory and countless movies in which estranged fathers and sons find themselves forced together and end up forging a deep bond. Hugh Jackman stars as Charlie Kenton, a former boxer who is now hanging onto the fringes of the fight game as the owner-operator of a ramshackle robot he tours with. It’s no match for the competition, and when the desperate Charlie replaces it with another battered veteran, it can’t even outfight a real bull.

Even during these early fight scenes, however, it’s clear than the movements of the robots are superbly choreographed. My complaint about the battling Transformers of the movies series is that they resemble incomprehensible piles of auto parts thrown at each other. Fast cutting is used to disguise the lack of spatial continuity. “Real Steel,” however, slows down the fight action enough so that we can actually perceive it, and the boxing makes sense.

OK, OK, it doesn’t completely make sense, because when one of these behemoths slugs the other with a right cross to the jaw, we’re wondering (1) shouldn’t one of those punches cause as much damage as a car wreck, and (2) why do robots have jaws? For that matter, why are they humanoid at all? “Real Steel” doesn’t pause for logical explanations. In this world, robots do the work that human boxers used to do. (Sugar Ray Leonard was a consultant on the fight scenes.) The director is Shawn Levy, who didn’t endear himself to me with the “Night at the Museum” movies, but gets on base with this one.

If the movie were all robot fights it might be as unbearable as — well, a Transformers title. Drama enters in the person of Charlie’s son, Max Kenton (Dakota Goyo), a smart, resilient pre-teen who, like all kids, seems to have been genetically programmed to understand computers, video games and all allied fields. Charlie is a very bad absent father, and as played by Hugh Jackman, he is actually mean toward his boy. Charlie’s sister (Hope Davis) and her husband (James Rebhorn) plan to adopt the boy, but in a complicated arrangement, Charlie first has to take care of Max for a summer.

This Max is some kid. He loves robots. During a scouting expedition in a ‘bot junk yard, he comes upon an ancient training robot named Atom literally covered in mud and convinces his dad this relic still has fighting potential. Amazingly, it hasn’t entirely rusted away, and father and son rehab it and teach it some new tricks. One of its abilities is a “mirror mode,” which allows it to mimic the motions of its controller. Since Charlie is a has-been boxer, Max has faith that Atom can win as his dad’s avatar.

All of course leads up to a big match with a fearsome juggernaut named Zeus. To my amazement, this fight scene is as entertaining and involving as most human fights, and the off-screen story (involving Zeus’ odious owners) adds interest. It’s hard to hate a robot, but not its owners.

Curiously, however, it’s easy to love Atom. With his blue eyes glowing behind a face of steel mesh and his skinny, muscular body facing off against giants, he’s a likable underdog. Steven Spielbergwas one of the producers of this film, and knowing of the research he put into making E. T. lovable, I wonder if screen-testing was used to help design Atom. You wouldn’t say he looked cute, but there is something about him that’s much more appealing that his shiny high-tech rivals.

“Real Steel” is a real movie. It has characters, it matters who they are, it makes sense of its action, it has a compelling plot. This is the sort of movie, I suspect, young viewers went to the “Transformers” movies looking for. Readers have told me they loved and identified with their Transformers toys as children. Atom must come close to representing their fantasies. Sometimes you go into a movie with low expectations and are pleasantly surprised.

 

Title: Red Tails Trailer

Director: Anthony Hemingway

Cast: Terrence Howard, Cuba Gooding Jr., Bryan Cranston, Tristan Wilds, Lee Tergesen

Synopsis: Watch the Red Tails trailer. The story of the Tuskegee Airmen, the first African-American pilots to fly in a combat squadron during World War II. Watch the Red Tails 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 Red Tails

Genre: Action & Adventure


Red Tails Trailer – Watch more Movie Trailers

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