The Yes Men Fix The World 2009 – trailer
This is a trailer for The Yes Men Fix The World (dir. Andy Bichlbaum, Mike Bonanno 2009), the sequel to The Yes Men (Christ Smith, Sarah Price, Dan Ollman 2004).
This is a trailer for The Yes Men Fix The World (dir. Andy Bichlbaum, Mike Bonanno 2009), the sequel to The Yes Men (Christ Smith, Sarah Price, Dan Ollman 2004).
High quality version of the new trailer for Star Trek (2009) that was shown with Quantum of Solace. Star Trek is being directed by JJ Abrams who also directed MI:III, Cloverfield and produced such series as Lost and Alias. The movie features Leonard Nimoy and Zachary Quinto as the old and young Spock. Chris Pine is Kirk. The movie also features Eric Bana, Winona Ryder, Zoe Saldana, Karl Urban, Bruce Greenwood, John Cho, Simon Pegg and Anton Yelchin. It will be released on May 8th. NOTE: True …
Second trailer for ‘Fast & Furious’ – starring Paul Walker, Vin Diesel, Jordana Brewster, John Ortiz, Liza LaPira. When a crime brings them back to LA, fugitive ex-con Dom Toretto reignites his feud with agent Brian O’Conner. But as they are forced to confront a shared enemy, Dom and Brian must give in to an uncertain new trust if they hope to outmanuever him. And from convoy heists to precision tunnel crawls across international lines, two men will find the best way to get revenge: push the …
Fight Night Round 4 is a boxing video game developed by EA Sports. It is the sequel to EA Sports’ previous boxing title, Fight Night Round 3, which was released in 2006. Round 4 is expected to be released on July 1, 2009 for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3. Speculated fighters include Muhammad Ali, Winky Wright, Sugar Ray Leonard, Oscar De La Hoya, Lennox Lewis, Mike Tyson, George Foreman, Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao.
Two of film’s funniest–Seth Rogen and Anna Faris–headline this dark comedy set in the world of…a shopping mall. Head of security Ronnie Barnhardt can’t wait for the day when he has real power as a cop, but when shoppers are harassed by a flasher, he sees his chance to prove his worth. Directed by Jody Hill (THE FOOT FIST WAY), OBSERVE AND REPORT also stars Michael Pena and Ray Liotta.
French director Olivier Assayas (BOARDING GATE, IRMA VEP) subverts expectations with this empathetic drama about the fading relevance of objects as generations pass from one to the next. Helene (Edith Scob) has just turned 75 and is increasingly concerned about the particulars of leaving her estate behind when she dies. Unfortunately, the time comes when Adrienne (Juliette Binoche), Jeremie (Jeremie Renier), and Frederic (Charles Berling) must decide what to do with Helene’s house and the artwork left behind by her famous uncle. Adrienne, who is living in New York City, and Jeremie, who is working in Asia, both understand that their future no longer resides in France, leaving the burden to Frederic. However, even when the siblings are at odds, they don’t succumb to fighting. They seem to understand and accept that this is an unfortunate, muddled situation, and as much as they’d love to hold on to the house, it appears that their current situations carry more of an influence than the lives of their nostalgic past.<br><br>With SUMMER HOURS, Assayas has delivered an understated motion picture about the importance of objects as historical artifacts and family heirlooms, and how time renders these objects obsolete. Contrary to the dysfunctional family dramas of fellow countryman Arnaud Desplechin (A CHRISTMAS TALE, KINGS AND QUEEN), Assayas keeps his characters calm and stable throughout. He isn’t condemning these individuals for turning their backs on the past, and he certainly isn’t out to belittle the importance of these objects’ places in history. Shot by the acclaimed Eric Gautier and flawlessly acted by its principal cast, SUMMER HOURS is a touching, thoughtful drama.
Based on a story by author Ryne Douglas Pearson, KNOWING is a moody sci-fi thriller that stars Nicolas Cage as John Koestler, a widowed MIT astrophysicist who lives in wooded seclusion with his young son, Caleb (Chandler Canterbury). When Caleb is handed an envelope unearthed from a school time capsule buried 50 years earlier, its cryptic numerical sequence captures the interest of his dad, who soon realizes the powerful significance of the document, which seems to predict major world disasters throughout history. Unfortunately, there are three calamities that have yet to unfold, and John, aided reluctantly by widowed mom Diana Wayland (Rose Byrne) and her daughter, Abby (Lara Robinson), must try to unravel the mystery of the numbers before many more lives are lost.<br><br>Alex Proyas’s follow-up to 2004’s I, ROBOT, KNOWING returns to the shadowy atmosphere of the director’s revered cult film, DARK CITY, while staying within the realm of the Hollywood big-budget disaster movie. Though the plot takes some outlandish turns, the film is grounded by solid performances from Cage, Byrne, and the impressive child actors, and Proyas further anchors the proceedings in moments of captivatingly bleak realism. Like the remake of THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL, KNOWING is a pensive and melancholy thriller that rewards discerning viewers willing to follow its strange and intriguing tale.
For those who thought there couldn’t possibly be a sequel to CRANK, this adrenaline-fueled film marks a return for the character of Chev Chelios (Jason Statham). In CRANK: HIGH VOLTAGE, Chelios tears through Los Angeles as he searches for the Chinese criminal who has possession of his heart. Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor are back in the directors’ chairs, and Amy Smart, Dwight Yoakam, and Efren Ramirez revisit their roles from the original film.