Source: Gawker
Awesome news out of San Diego Comic-Con. Spider-Man director Sam Raimi announced that he’s getting back together with actor Bruce Campbell for a fourth installment of their stellar Evil Dead franchise. Though the zombie-filled series has been dormant since 1992’s Army of Darkness, Raimi—who was promoting his upcoming flick, Drag Me to Hell—told fans that part 4 is "in the wheelhouse."
"I love working with Bruce Campbell… He’s super willing to do anything to make it right. He’s a very funny guy, but mostly he’s got this quality where he will physically do anything to get the shot done right, so I would love to work with Bruce again because I’d love to test those limits. I’d love to make another Evil Dead picture. And actually that’s in the wheelhouse. I’d like to work on it with my brother Ivan [Raimi] when he comes up next week.“
Source: Scifi.com
J.J. Abrams, who is directing the upcoming Star Trek reboot movie, told reporters that star Leonard Nimoy will be "a major presence" in the film, reprising his classic role of Mr. Spock.
"I mean, he’s a major presence, I think, in any scene he’s in. He’s terrific," Abrams said in a group interview in Santa Monica, Calif., on July 14, part of the Television Critics Association’s summer press tour. (Abrams was promoting his upcoming Fox SF series Fringe.)
Abrams has been tight-lipped about the storyline of Star Trek, except to acknowledge that it deals with the original series characters of Capt. Kirk, Mr. Spock and Dr. McCoy. Nimoy and Heroes star Zachary Quinto both play Spock, presumably at different ages.
As for Nimoy, Abrams said: "It was really just a dream experience working with him. … He’s everything you’d want him to be. He’s funny, and he’s incredibly thoughtful and was surprisingly open to and receptive to direction."
Abrams praised Nimoy’s family and added: "The other day, we were doing some ADR, [additional dialogue] recording. He was there, and … because we weren’t shooting anymore, … I was standing there, and I just, like, started. I just like looked at him as he was doing his thing. I was like, I wanted to burn it on my hand, because it was so great to get to work with that guy. He’s just an amazing man and terrific in the movie." Star Trek is in post-production, with an eye to a May 8, 2009, release. |
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Source: Scifi.com
Robert Sorcher, chief content officer of the Cartoon Network, told SCI FI Wire that the cable network will turn Saturdays into a fantasy-adventure day.
In addition to the new series Star Wars: Clone Wars, the network will also feature a new animated incarnation of Batman in the fall.
"Clone Wars will anchor an evening programming block that will also include Batman: The Brave and the Bold from Warner Brothers, as well as the returning series Ben 10," Sorcher said at the Television Critics Association summer press tour in Beverly Hills, Calif., last week. "It will be a good night for sci-fi programs."
Ben 10 is about a 10-year-old who finds the Omnitrix, a high-tech gadget that looks like a watch and changes him into 10 aliens with different abilities.
Star Wars: Clone Wars supervising director David Filoni said that young audiences aren’t tired of the Star Wars saga, and the animated series is a new way of presenting the known characters. "Every time I go to Toys R Us," Filoni said, "there are kids picking up lightsabers and imagining themselves in that galaxy far, far away, and as long as it inspires them, I’m happy to make more."
The new Saturday night programming is not yet scheduled, but Sorcher said it will debut sometime after the Star Wars: The Clone Wars movie hits theaters on Aug. 15. |
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