Showing posts with label The Avengers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Avengers. Show all posts

Apr 16, 2015

Marvel’s Avengers Show the Villainous Ultron What They Got in a New TV Spot for ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’

Marvel has released a new TV spot (previously) for Avengers: Age of Ultron, the upcoming sequel to the 2012 superhero film The Avengers. The TV spot gives us a glimpse of Marvel’s team of powerful Avengers showing the enemies exactly what they got. Ultron, the artificial intelligence villain being portrayed by actor James Spader, has a lot of evil deeds to answer for.




With S.H.I.E.L.D. destroyed and the Avengers needing a
hiatus from stopping threats, Tony Stark attempts to jumpstart a dormant
peacekeeping program with Ultron, a self-aware, self-teaching,
artificial intelligence. However, his plan backfires when Ultron decides
that humans are the main enemy and sets out to eradicate them from
Earth, and it is up to Iron Man, Captain America, Thor, the Hulk, Black
Widow and Hawkeye, along with support from Nick Fury and Maria Hill, to
stop him from enacting his plans. Along the way, the Avengers encounter
the powerful twins, Pietro and Wanda Maximoff, as well as the familiar
Vision.
Marvel also released a new poster featuring Ultron:


Avengers: Age of Ultron
image via AvengersAvengers: Age of Ultron’

Jan 13, 2015

Avengers: Age of Ultron Trailer Gets the Gang Back Together

The world's most powerful band of superheroes is getting back 

 

together! Marvel's classic favorites are shown reuniting in a new
trailer for the upcoming Avengers sequel, Avengers: Age of Ultron.


The early peek at the second installment debuted on Monday, Jan. 12,
airing on ESPN during the inaugural College Football National
Championship. In a commercial break from Ohio State's battle against
Oregon, the Avengers were shown taking on their new enemy.


PHOTOS: Stars As Superheroes


The latest preview for Avengers: Age of Ultron opens with
shots of chaos and civilian strife as the voice of a hero is heard
saying, "This vulnerable world... needs something more powerful than any
of us."


Appearances are then made by original Avengers stars Chris Hemsworth, Robert Downey Jr., Jeremy Renner, Samuel L. Jackson, and Scarlett Johansson, as characters Thor, Iron Man, Hawkeye, Nick Fury, and Black Widow, respectively.


PHOTOS: Celebrities' Best Shapes Ever in Movie and TV Roles


Iron Man's human incarnation Tony Stark is shown causing trouble as
he attempts to save the world. He reboots an old robotic system called
Ultron as a voice is heard warning "Everyone creates the thing they
dread."


Intended to keep the people safe, the robot Ultron has inconceivable
powers and free will as he comes to the conclusion that humans are the
real problem and must be destroyed. Voiced by James Spader, Ultron is shown wreaking havoc before he promises the Avengers, "I'm going to tear you apart... from the inside."


PHOTOS: Movie Makeovers: Memorable Drab to Fab Character Transformations


Due out on May 1, Avengers: Age of Ultron also stars Mark Ruffalo, Don Cheadle, Hayley Atwell, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, and Idris Elba, among others. Catch the latest look at the action flick in the video above!
- Us Weekly

Nov 3, 2014

‘Avengers: Age Of Ultron’ Recruits A New Villain

Power down, Ultron — you’re not the only villain targeting “The Avengers.”

“The Blacklist” actor James Spader voices the android antagonist in “The Avengers: Age of Ultron,” hitting theaters in 2015. But he’s not the only bad guy in the mix. Latino-Review.com reports
that Joss Whedon’s super-sequel has a second villain in the picture:
Baron Von Strucker, the menacing leader of HYDRA, the evil organization
previously featured in “Captain America: The First Avenger.”

A further report from HitFix.com states
that Von Strucker will be Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch’s commander in
the “Avengers” sequel; Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Elizabeth Olsen occupy
those roles, respectively.

Actors Dougray Scott and Marton Csokas are reportedly in contention
for the Von Strucker role. Not to mess with Marvel’s mojo, but neither
actor really “pops” in the same way as, say, Spader as Ultron. With that
in mind, Marvel, here are a few other names to mull while considering
the Von Strucker casting process:

Bryan Cranston

Quick, before Superman gets to him! Yes, the “Breaking Bad” star is the
easy and obvious answer to play just about anybody this side of Mary
Jane Watson. (Honestly, Andrew Garfield would probably be on board for
Cranston as MJ.) But, really, in the case of Baron Von Strucker, there
are few better options.


Cranston fits the Von Strucker mold, as outlined in the character’s
reported breakdown. He plays nasty better than nearly everybody. He
looks good without hair. But best part of all? He would complete the
“Avengers”-”Godzilla” connection, playing a paternal figure to
Taylor-Johnson and Olsen in both films. It’s worth casting Cranston for
that sight gag alone.


Mads Mikkelsen

He was almost Malekith in “Thor: The Dark World,” so both Mikkelsen and
Marvel have shown interest in working together. With that foot already
in the door, Von Strucker presents the perfect opportunity for the two
parties to take it to the next level.

Mikkelsen has the perfect résumé for the gig: He’s a former “Bond”
villain, he has that deadly Eastern European vibe, and he already has
Von Strucker’s shifty-eyed glare on lock. Not only that, but it would be
great to see two of TV’s finest villains take their terrorizing talents
to the big-screen. (Spader plays Red Reddington on “The Blacklist,”
while Mikkelsen is the titular cannibal on “Hannibal.”)


Ralph Fiennes

Hey, if Robert Redford can star in a Marvel movie, then Ralph Fiennes
isn’t too big to get his super-villain on. After all, he played the
make-up-heavy Voldemort in five out of eight “Harry Potter” films.
Casting aside the Dark Lord’s slit-nosed visage in favor of Von
Strucker’s comparatively plain aesthetic would be a piece of cake.

As for his qualifications, well, they speak loud and clear all on
their own. Fiennes is one of the finest actors in the business, and
truly one of the best when it comes to playing someone ruthless. If
Marvel wants to inject some more star-power into the “Avengers” sequel,
casting Fiennes could be the way to go.

“The Avengers: Age of Ultron” hits theaters on May 1, 2015.

 - MTV

Aug 28, 2014

Stellan Skarsgard Returns For ‘The Avengers: Age of Ultron’

Stellan Skarsgard as Dr Erik Selvig Stellan Skarsgard Returns For The Avengers: Age of Ultron
In Phase 1 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the origin story for Thor helped setup the villain and main plot of The Avengers. A key to the pseudo-science involved in making the otherworldly stuff in Thor and The Avengers
work was the character of Dr. Erik Selvig played by Stellan Skarsgård, a
mentor of Natalie Portman’s Jane Foster. Selvig returned again in an
even wackier, comedic exposition-focused role for Thor: The Dark World for even more questionable science-y plot necessities and we just learned that he’ll be back again for The Avengers: Age of Ultron.


From what we know about The Avengers sequel, it’s very Earth-based. The titular villain Ultron is a creation of hero Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) and new potential hero Vision is a creation of Ultron.
There are no alien armies, portals opening over major cities or flying
space whales involved… that we know of. Yet in chatting with Total Film, Skarsgård confirmed that he does have a part to play in writer and director’s Joss Whedon’s sequel to The Avengers and that he’ll again be there to serve a very specific purpose.


After joking in the interview about how he first joined Marvel and
had little faith or knowledge that a superhero franchise could become
what it is today, Skarsgard explained that he has the number of Marvel
Studios president of production Kevin Feige’s and can call him whenever
he has “a problem with the scene.” He continues, “you can’t do that when
you work on a normal Disney film or with Warner Bros or Paramount.”
That would be terrible for a director if every actor could go over their
head but the actor confirmed that he signed on for five films before
revealing that he has “a small appearance” in Age of Ultron in what he describes as “something really nice.”


“Yeah, I was naked again. They called my agent and said,
‘Do you think Stellan will mind being naked?’ My agent laughed his head
off. Yeah, I almost insist! Sometimes with a contract you get a nudity
clause, which is fantastic. It’s supposed to protect me from having my
genitals exploited, which I doubt anybody would make a dime on.”


“First of all, I don’t know what I’m allowed to say. But usually they
call me in if they need something explained. There’s a lot of
explanations to do when it comes to that universe.”
If we’re getting naked older Skarsgård again (and not his son who’s frequently naked in HBO’s True Blood), we could be seeing another scene of Selvig losing his mind again just like we saw in Thor: The Dark World.
That or Whedon is simply playing on that naked gag for laughs. We
expect it to be the former if he’s there to explain stuff and maybe
Selvig is one of the many cameos we could see during the widely reported
party scene at Avengers tower that was partially shown in the San Diego Comic-Con footage.


We know the film picks up from the post-credits button scene of Captain America: The Winter Soldier
where new villainous character Baron von Strucker (Thomas Kretschmann)
is experimenting on Loki’s staff and Chitauri alien technology from The Avengers
and seemingly using it on other new characters, the twins Quicksilver
(Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen). Perhaps
Selvig’s expertise comes in handy with The Avengers learning
how the newcomers have powers or in deciphering what Strucker has been
up to. Maybe Ultron seeks Selvig out for knowledge?



Thor 2 The Dark World Official Still Photo 25 1024x422 Stellan Skarsgard Returns For The Avengers: Age of Ultron
Dr. Erik Selvig Explaining The Universe
If Stellan Skarsgard does have five-picture contract though, it’s a safe bet he’s back for Thor 3 which is currently without a release date but has a script in the works by Craig Kyle (Thor: Tales of Asgard) and Christopher Yost (Thor: The Dark World). Ready for more naked Selvig?

Feb 20, 2013

How ILM Created a Digital New York City for The Avengers

How ILM Created a Digital New York City for The Avengers Seriously, after seeing ILM work its magic in all of its movie, I basically trust ILM with anything. If the next movie ILM works on doesn't involve real actors or real sets or even a real script, I don't care, I'm in. If ILM told me it could make a world better than real life, I'd totally sign up. Anything ILM does is gold. The visual effects wizards can even magically, er, digitally recreate New York City. Watch.
According to ILM, about a third of The Avengers was set in NYC but only a teeeeny bit was actualy filmed there. Instead, ILM photographed 250,000 pictures of 7-miles of city streets at different heights and time of the day to digitally recreate New York. You can't even tell the freaking difference between ILM's fake New York and real New York.
The crew then digitally recreated roughly 20 square blocks of mid-town Manhattan using a variety of techniques. Live action shoots were held primarily on sound stages in New Mexico and in the streets of Cleveland.
Clevelend is the New New York City. [ILMVisualFX]

Aug 12, 2012

Joss Whedon Signs on to Write, Direct 'Avengers' Sequel

  
Joss Whedon attends the premiere of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" in Hollywood.
Joss Whedon attends the premiere of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" in Hollywood.
Alberto E. Rodriguez/WireImage

Joss Whedon will write and direct the sequel to The Avengers as part of an exclusive three-year deal with Marvel Studios, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The arrangement also includes a Marvel-related TV series for ABC.

A sequel was already in the works for The Avengers, which has grossed $1.46 billion so far, though it wasn't clear whether Whedon would be involved until Disney CEO Robert Iger mentioned the deal yesterday during an earnings call in which he boasted about the film being the third-biggest movie, and said that Disney plans to "leverage the power of the Avengers" across the entire company. 

Whedon's exact role remains unclear, apart from the sequel, though Marvel said in a statement that he will "contribute creatively to the next phase of Marvel's cinematic universe," suggesting that Whedon could help shape a handful of possible upcoming Marvel TV shows and movies. There hasn't been a Marvel-oriented television show since Blade aired on Spike TV in 2006. One such small-screen adaptation is a possible Incredible Hulk series that Guillermo del Toro is attached to. ABC entertainment president Paul Lee said in May that he hoped to have the show ready for next season.

Returning to television would put Whedon back on familiar ground: He rose to prominence following the success of  Buffy The Vampire Slayer and Angel, both of which he created; along with the short-lived program Firefly. Though not all have been consistent hits, Whedon's projects typically develop strong followings.

 

Jul 10, 2012

Scarlett Johansson's 'Avengers' Paycheck: Actress Setting Record With Reported $20 Million For Sequel

Scarlett Johansson's turn as Black Widow in "The Avengers" was so well-received that producers are willing to throw some serious cash her way for the sequel. According to The New York Post, she has been offered a record-breaking $20 million to reprise her role in the second film.
That's a cool $1 million more than Angelina Jolie earned for "The Tourist," the ill-received 2010 film that actually ended up bringing in $278 million worldwide.
For some perspective, Forbes ranked Kristen Stewart as last year's highest-paid actress, but she can "only" bank about $12.5 million per film (Stewart made $34.5 million over 12 months). Cameron Diaz was second on this year's Forbes list at $34 million, but acted in three movies for that sum.
Marvel and Disney have plenty of money to toss around, as "The Avengers" is now the third-biggest global box office draw in history, having brought in over $1.355 billion in worldwide sales (that's more than "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2").

Loading Slideshow...
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actress Scarlett Johansson arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actress Scarlett Johansson arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Chris Evans arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Jeremy Renner arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Robert Downey Jr. and his wife Susan Downey arrive at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Samuel L. Jackson arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Chris Hemsworth arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Actor Mark Ruffalo (R) and Sunrise Coign

    Actor Mark Ruffalo (R) and Sunrise Coigney arrive at the the world premiere of Marvel’s 'The Avengers', at the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood, California, April 11, 2012. AFP PHOTO / Robyn Beck (Photo credit should read ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: (L-R) Actors Alexander Skarsgard and Stellan Skarsgard arrive at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Actress Scarlet Johansson arrives at the

    Actress Scarlet Johansson arrives at the the world premiere of Marvel’s 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood, California, April 11, 2012. AFP PHOTO / Robyn Beck (Photo credit should read ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actress Scarlett Johansson arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Jeremy Renner arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Chris Hemsworth arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Robert Downey Jr. arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Mario Lopez arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Tom Hiddleston arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actress Scarlett Johansson arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actress Scarlett Johansson arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actress Scarlett Johansson arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actress Scarlett Johansson arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Musician Chris Cornell arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Sunrise Coigney (L) and actor Mark Ruffalo arrive at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Jeremy Renner arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Jeremy Renner arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Chris Evans arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Samuel L. Jackson arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actors Clark Gregg (L) and Jennifer Grey arrive at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Writer/director Joss Whedon arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Writer/director Joss Whedon arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
  • Actor Chris Hemsworth arrives at the the

    Actor Chris Hemsworth arrives at the the world premiere of Marvel’s 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood, California, April 11, 2012. AFP PHOTO / Robyn Beck (Photo credit should read ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Chris Evans arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor/comedian Hal Sparks arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
  • Actress Scarlett Johansson arrives for t

    Actress Scarlett Johansson arrives for the world premiere of “Marvel’s The Avengers', at the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood, California, April 11, 2012. AFP PHOTO / Robyn Beck (Photo credit should read ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Alexander Skarsgard arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
  • Premiere Of Marvel Studios' "Marvel's The Avengers" - Arrivals

    HOLLYWOOD, CA - APRIL 11: Actor Jon Favreau arrives at the premiere of Marvel Studios' 'The Avengers' at the El Capitan Theatre on April 11, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)



































































































'Avengers' Premiere Photos

Getty

May 11, 2012

Around-the-World Roundup: 'Avengers' Dominates Again

by Ray Subers

The Avengers


May 8, 2012
Tuesday Update: The Avengers earned $28.4 million on Monday to bring its overseas total to $475.8 million. Combined with its $226.3 million domestic total, Marvel's superhero team-up has so far earned over $700 million worldwide (placing it 47th on the all-time chart).
Around-the-World Roundup: Aside from crushing the opening weekend record in the U.S., The Avengers had another phenomenal overseas session this weekend. The movie added $157.4 million from 52 territories, which brings its 12-day foreign total to a massive $447.4 million.
Its only major openings this weekend came in Russia and China, where it took first place with $17.9 million and $17.4 million, respectively. Neither of these are close to record-setting levels, though that shouldn't take away from how impressive they are either. Including Monday, the highest-grossing territories for The Avengers are the United Kingdom ($54 million), Mexico ($40.7 million), Brazil ($33.9 million), Australia ($33.2 million), and South Korea ($31.8 million). The only top tier market left to open is Japan, which will unleash The Avengers in August.
Including the domestic opening, the movie has so far made $641.8 million worldwide. That tops all of the franchise's previous movies including former top entry Iron Man 2 ($624 million). It's a foregone conclusion at this point that The Avengers winds up with over $1 billion worldwide, and it could get as high as fourth on the all-time chart ahead of Transformers: Dark of the Moon ($1.12 billion). It's unlikely that Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2's $1.33 billion is in reach, but crazier things have happened.
American Reunion came in second place at the foreign box office this weekend with an estimated $33.5 million from 48 markets. It opened to an impressive $10.2 million in the U.K., and also had a strong $4.9 million debut in France. In both of those markets, the movie wound up in second place behind The Avengers; however, it took first place ahead of The Avengers in Italy ($3.4 million and Spain ($2.9 million). With a $117 million total so far, American Reunion is on pace to beat American Pie 2's $142.5 million to set a new series record.
Battleship added an estimated $11 million to bring its overseas total just past the $200 million mark. It's now Universal Pictures' highest-grossing movie ever in China with $42.5 million. The board game adaptation opens in Latin America this week, then in the U.S. next Friday.
A week after its disappointing domestic launch, The Five-Year Engagement played a bit better in its first overseas markets. It earned $2.2 million this weekend, most of which came from a very solid $2 million second place opening in Australia. Its next big market is the U.K. on June 22.
Become a fan of Box Office Mojo on Facebook. On Twitter, follow us at @boxofficemojo, and follow author Ray Subers at @raysubers.
Other Notables - Weekend Gross - Gross-to-Date (in millions)The Hunger Games - $6.4 - $239.8
The Lucky One - $5.4 - $17.9
Titanic 3D - $5.2 - $277.1
Mirror Mirror - $4.4 - $93.8
The Pirates! - $2.95 - $70.6
The Lorax - $2.3 - $92.2
21 Jump Street - $2.2 - $45
Cabin in the Woods - $2.1 - $15
Intouchables - $2.1 - $336.3
Wrath of the Titans - $1.5 - $217.1
Best Exotic Marigold Hotel - $1.5 - $72.8t
Related Charts:2012 Worldwide GrossesAll-Time Worldwide Grosses

May 5, 2012

'Avengers' takes off with $18.7M at midnight shows


LOS ANGELES (AP) - Iron Man and his fellow avengers are off to a solid start as they bring their save-the-world act to U.S. theaters.
"The Avengers" launched domestically early Friday with $18.7 million from midnight screenings. That puts it at No. 8 all-time for midnight debuts, just behind the $19.7 million start for "The Hunger Games" in March.
But it's well under half the amount for the No. 1 midnight draw - the "Harry Potter" finale last fall with $43.5 million.
"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2" also went on to the biggest domestic opening weekend ever with $169.2 million.
While "The Avengers" started modestly compared with the last "Harry Potter" flick, it still may end up among the top weekend openings ever. "The Hunger Games" followed its midnight start with a $152.3 million debut weekend, the No. 3 opening behind "Deathly Hallows: Part 2" and "The Dark Knight" at $158.4 million.
Produced by Disney's Marvel Studios unit, "The Avengers" already is a blockbuster overseas, where it opened last week in 39 markets.
Disney reported that through Thursday, "The Avengers" had taken in $304 million internationally. In barely a week, "The Avengers" has pulled in far more overseas than some of Marvel Studios' earlier releases in their entire run, including "Iron Man,""Thor" and "Captain America: The First Avenger."
"The Avengers" assembles key Marvel Comics superheroes introduced in earlier films, including Robert Downey Jr. as Iron Man, Scarlett Johansson as Black Widow, Chris Hemsworth as Thor, Chris Evans as Captain America and Jeremy Renner as Hawkeye. Samuel L. Jackson reprises his role as superhero recruiter Nick Fury, and Mark Ruffalo makes his debut as the Incredible Hulk.

May 3, 2012

Inside Pulse | The Avengers – Review


“Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
By the time this film is released nationally, I will have seen it twice. That’s not me bragging; it’s me illustrating that as a writer and lover of film – usually seeing more than 130 films theatrically in a given year – I typically only see them once in a darkened auditorium. However, a film like The Avengers begs to be seen multiple times. It’s that good.
My initial impressions, which I shared as I exited the first screening, was simply, “That movie was [expletive deleted] awesome.” But that’s not to insinuate I’m a Marvel Comics fanboy. I’ve enjoyed all the movies that comprise the Marvel Cinematic Universe, in general, and had strong expectations that Joss Whedon’s vision would be at or near the movies that have come before it. I never expected the final product to set the bar of what future Marvel movies would aspire to be.
While it doesn’t transcend the genre like The Dark Knight – Avengers’ foe Loki (Tom Hiddleston) recently wrote a piece for The Guardian noting that Heath Ledger’s performance as The Joker “changed the game,” and added that the late actor “raised the bar not just for actors in superhero films, but young actors everywhere; for me.” – the movie has an overriding sense of enthusiasm (hence the Emerson quote above). This is good news for Joss Whedon fans that have championed the cult status work (more so for TV’s Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Firefly; not his screenwriting contribution to Alien: Resurrection) of the multifaceted magician of all things media. Here he has produced something that is very entertaining while at the same time exuding a sort of confidence we haven’t seen since the first Iron Man.
For those who have been emotionally invested in all the films of Marvel’s Cinematic Universe, which Robert Downey Jr. once described in an interview were used as a means of “cross-pollinating our superheroes,” then you know that Marvel Studios has been building to this release for quite some time. Rather than try to shoehorn characters into a massive comic-book movie epic, The Avengers has been preceded by five superhero movies meant to establish a universe where characters and plot elements are shared. It began with 2008’s Iron Man and continued with The Incredible Hulk, Iron Man 2, Thor, and Captain America: The First Avenger.
With all that build up expectations were to be had. This is the ultimate endgame after all; a superhero dream team joining together to stop a baddie (Thor’s Loki) with long-stemming family issues. Up until now the previous films felt like episodes of a TV series leading up to a thrilling season finale. So it makes sense that the man pulling the strings would be someone who comes from a TV background. Whedon’s own experience as a comic-book writer, having done multiple story arcs for Marvel’s Astonishing X-Men and Runaways, is also an asset. That background helps, especially knowing that Whedon’s key ear for writing witty dialogue with pithy remarks and pop culture references that come into play. The references aren’t used as a way to stick out and be distracting – this isn’t George Clooney saying, “This is why Superman works alone” – each remark or put-down helps underline the characters. Of course, Robert Downey Jr. gets the lion’s share because that’s Tony Stark’s MO. But The Hulk, here played by Mark Ruffalo (replacing Edward Norton), has at least three moments that turn the film from one of the most action-packed to one of the funniest you’re likely to see this summer.
Additionally, Whedon goes as far as to give each character a shining moment so that he or she isn’t forgotten, left to stand around in the background. The best example would be Black Widow, aka Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johansson). As the lone female in a group of male heroes with superhuman abilities, she is just a leather-clad femme with a Ph.D. in ass-kickery. So she’s got the attitude to hang with the boys, but her appearance in Iron Man 2 didn’t reveal much about her character. Before the title screen appears we learn quite a bit, and her history is later explored in a scene featuring her and Loki. No explosions take place or punches thrown, but it has one of those nice “gotcha” moments that make it more than just filler before the grand finale.
In a business that thrives on sequels, remakes and franchises, Marvel Studios has succeeded in building a universe with The Avengers as its brass ring. The films prior have told individual stories of all the major players within the faction while also building up the eventual emergence of the superhero team. So while much of the Iron Man sequel felt like the zero issue of The Avengers with all the Avengers Initiative exposition presented, the payoff is justly rewarded. Overall, this is easily the best film in the Marvel canon, and it leaves you to wonder how things could have been if Marvel Comics hadn’t licensed some of its characters to other studios. Imagine the crossovers that could have been possible had Spider-Man not web-slinged his way to Columbia Pictures or Wolverine raised Adamantium-claw hell over at 20th Century Fox.
Up until now the best superhero movies have revolved around a singular character. I’m looking specifically at Richard Donner’s Superman and Christopher Nolan’s Batman. While Nolan’s “realistic” approach to The Caped Crusader has brought the superhero film to unparalleled heights, Joss Whedon embraces the outrageousness of his creation. But he does it with respect. Whereas Superman has a strong moral compass that, to this day, continues to fascinate cultural theorists, and Batman is a vigilante yet watchful protector of the fictional Gotham City, the Avengers are known as “Earth’s Mightiest Heroes,” fighting the “foes no single superhero can withstand.” And judging from the climatic 30-minute battle at the end they hold true to this theme.
Outside of the action and comedy, what really struck me is the sense of community and all the work that goes into to corralling egos (or in this case, Superegos) and have them function as a unit. The X-Men films (not including X-Men: First Class) had the team aspect pretty much in place from the start so the biggest ego to contain was that of Wolverine. Here we see how those characters already introduced in the five previous Marvel movies form relationships through a convergence of events that sometimes see our heroes square off against one another in mini skirmishes.
As far as the actors go, everyone plays their roles pitch perfect. Robert Downey Jr., brilliantly cast in the role of the genius-billionaire-playboy-philanthropist Tony Stark, again steals the show. Chris Evans as Steve Rogers (aka Captain America) reveals a gullibility that’s instantly relatable to anyone who can’t see the forest for the trees. Because for Cap, in his mind, yesterday he was battling Nazis, now he’s in the present day acclimating himself to the world and its overriding sense moral decay and cynicism. Chris Hemsworth, who got the role of Thor while acting in Whedon’s production of The Cabin in the Woods (which finally saw release this year after being on the shelf since 2009), is an awesome Thunder God taking on as much punishment as he can dish out, including a great knockdown drag out with everyone’s favorite misunderstood Not-So-Jolly Green Giant.
Twice already they have had different origin stories for The Hulk. First, it was Ang Lee’s flawed look at Dr. Bruce Banner’s transformation into Hulk with Eric Bana in the starring role. Then, five years later, Louis Leterrier’s Incredible Hulk tried to begin again with Edward Norton in the Banner role. But neither film utilized The Hulk to his full potential. Now with Mark Ruffalo as Banner the third time was definitely the charm. Next to Tony Stark he may very well be the standout character in the film and the one most discussed.
Members of S.H.I.E.L.D. are also given their moments of glory. Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury gets to be Sam Jack with an eye patch and be the leader of the team he was meant to become. Cobie Smulders, who previously had a screen credit as “Beautiful Eye Candy in Car” in 2004’s Walking Tall, plays an agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. and serves her purpose well. Then there’s Clark Gregg as Agent Coulson. A suit and tie guy with a deadpan sense of humor, here he is rewarded for being “that agent who just happens to be the smartest guy in the room (when it comes to random, yet important, exposition).”
Clocking in at two hours and twenty minutes, The Avengers never feels long. It has so much going for it in terms of plot, character and action that it almost feels too good to be true. This is a blockbuster that delivers in convincing fashion and with a confidence that most intended blockbusters lack. Having characters to believe in and cheer for helps, and it makes the payoff that much sweeter.

Apr 25, 2011

Review: Thor offers up colorful, cosmic introduction to Asgards greatest hero

Tom Hiddleston and Chris Hemsworth play Loki and Thor, brothers whose complex relationship drives much of the drama in Marvel's newest superhero movie 'Thor'
Credit: Marvel Studios/Paramount
I am of mixed mind about the glut of superhero cinema right now, and this summer is going to test the patience of the audience with the genre.
In the comments section for my "Transformers" piece yesterday, Vern posted a few times, invoking the image of Pauline Kael trying to write about the current landscape of movies.  And it's both very funny and a nice humbling reminder that critics are defined by their overall diet of movies.  We are only ever as good as the movies we are given to write about, and when I'm done with all of this in the future, will the sum total of my work be varying opinions about how well people crafted movies that primarily deal with dudes in funny costumes beating the hell out of each other?
Review: 'Thor' offers up colorful, cosmic intro to Asgard's greatest heroThe thing is, part of me has been waiting my whole life to see the Marvel characters in particular brought to life on the bigscreen.  Now that they're actually doing it, there is a great deal of satisfaction in seeing how they approach each of the characters, and even if I haven't loved all of the films, it's been exciting to watch these things come to fruition.  And I am happy to admit that I'm an easy mark for this sort of thing.  I have a voracious appetite for pulp, and I'm not sold on the idea that these movies need to be "important".  On the other hand, if they're not fun, they don't really have any reason to exist.  These films cost a small fortune, especially if you want to make the outrageous seem possible, and that sets up the expectation that they must be bigger and more significant than the average issue of a comic book… even if that's all these films really are.
"Thor" is the latest film from Marvel Studios, and part of this year's double-feature that completes the run-up to next summer's "The Avengers," the biggest gamble the studio's made so far, and one of the biggest gambles from any studio in town.  One of the most common complaints about last year's "Iron Man 2" was that it felt like more of a set-up for another movie than a complete story that worked on its own, and that's certainly a danger when you're working your way towards something.  "Thor" is also risky for the studio because it is the first moment where they're introducing magic to the Marvel Universe, which has been defined by a sort of pseudo-science so far, impossible but at least pretending to be set in a real world.  With "Thor," they're making a pretty major jump, and even after visiting the set and reading the script, I had some big questions about whether or not they'd strike the right tone and find a way to make this feel like part of the world they've been so carefully building.
The answer is a resounding yes to both questions.
Chris Hemsworth, best known to audiences as Kirk's father in that powerful opening scene to "Star Trek," is just as good a fit for the character of Thor as Robert Downey Jr. is for Tony Stark, and that one thing goes a long way to making the film a pleasure to watch.  Finding the right way to introduce the character and his mythology is the big task this movie has, and there were some very interesting choices made in deciding how to bring Thor to life.  First, they dumped the notion of him changing into a human being, something that was part of the earliest version of the character that Marvel published.  Originally, Dr. Donald Blake had no idea he was Thor until a chance encounter with a cane he found in a cave revealed his true nature to himself.  In that version of the story, he had been sent to Earth by Odin to learn humility, and living his life as a human being in an infirm body was an important way of guaranteeing that he could not rely on his considerable physical power or his godly powers.
With "Captain America" coming out this summer and focusing on the startling transformation from skinny Steve Rogers to muscle-bound Captain America, Marvel made the wise decision to not deal with a shape-shifting Thor, while still finding a way to do something thematically similar.  Instead of an origin story, they've decided to tell the story of the moment when Thor goes from an indifferent impulsive god to a being who has a connection to our world that makes it important to him and who is able to think beyond himself finally.  It is his transition from a super-powered being to a full-blown superhero, and in doing so, they've managed to make a movie that doesn't really feel like any of the other Marvel movies, that has its own voice, and that pulls off its various goals with real charm.
The film opens on Earth, or, as Thor calls it, Midgard.  Jane Foster (Natalie Portman), her friend Darcy (Kat Dennings), and Professor Andrews (Stellan Skarsgard), Jane's mentor and advisor are looking at a strange energy phenomenon, one that Jane predicts will manifest again over a specific part of the southwestern desert.  When it does, they race towards it in their RV, braking only when a figure looms up out of a cloud of dust and debris and they end up hitting him.  As Jane runs to help him, she looks around at the miles and miles of desolate landscape and asks, simply, "Where did he come from?"
The next half-hour of the movie backs up to answer that question and introduce us not only to the character of Thor, but to the world he inhabits.  For years, I've heard Avi Arad and Kevin Feige refer to "Thor" as "Marvel's answer to 'Lord Of The Rings'," and when they first started developing the film, they were planning something more fantasy-oriented, a film that would take place across the Nine Realms.  That was before they started bringing all the properties together in one shared world, though, and at some point, they realized that they needed to use this movie to bring Midgard and Asgard together.  The film spends some time establishing the basic rules of Thor's world and introducing Odin Allfather (Anthony Hopkins), the ruler of all the realms, and his sons Thor and Loki (Tom Hiddleston), one of whom will end up sitting on his throne one day.  While Hopkins has certainly played variations on this type of figure many times over, he works with an economy here that is appreciated, and both Hemsworth and Hiddleston perfectly fit these roles.  They take these big mythic archetypes and make them human and specific, not an easy task.
Thor is close to taking the throne from Odin, and on his coronation day, there is a disturbance that upsets everything.  Frost Giants from Jotunheim, one of the Nine Realms, somehow manage to infiltrate Odin's Vault, where weapons gathered from around the universe, each one powerful enough to bring about Ragnarok, have been stored for safe-keeping.  There's one that was stolen from the Frost Giants that they want back, and they actually make it all the way to where it's stored before The Destroyer steps out and kills them all.  The coronation is interrupted before Thor can be crowned, and Odin, Loki, and Thor investigate, not sure how anyone could have made it into Asgard unobserved.  Thor wants to immediately go confront the Frost Giants, and in particular, he wants to kill Laufey, their king, as an example.  Odin tries to get him to stand down, but a bitter argument erupts between them, Loki desperate to make peace before things escalate.  Too late, though, and Odin realizes that he almost handed over the rule of Asgard to an angry child.
He strips Thor of his powers, banishes him to Midgard, and then invests Mjolnir, Thor's magic hammer, with a magical task.  Only once Thor has learned humility and become a person of substance… only once he is worthy… will he be able to reclaim his hammer and all the powers that come with it, setting up a very simple Sword In The Stone scenario which becomes Thor's main focus once he wakes up and realizes he's on Earth.  That brings the movie full-circle, back to that opening scene out in the desert, and is a major element in the middle of the film.  Based on the trailers and the clips so far, I was worried that the film would be nothing but wacky fish-out-of-water humor about Thor trying to fit into a modern world, but by now, you've seen most of that.  It's not the main thrust of the film.  Instead, the film keeps cutting between Asgard, where Odin has fallen into the enchanted Odinsleep, leaving Loki on the throne, and Earth, where Thor is having to confront what it means to be a mortal man.  Loki, who starts the film as a trusted and loved brother to Thor, reveals his true nature fairly early on to the audience, and he ends up learning some hard truths about his own origins that leave him shaken, things that threaten to destroy Asgard completely.
A few observations about things I really liked in this film:  when superpowered beings fight in this film, there is a sense of power and force that we still haven't seen in many of these movies.  I've complained often about how disappointing it is when Superman faces off against a human-scaled threat like Lex Luthor because it means we never really see the upper limits of what Superman can do.  In this film, there are many fights where every single being onscreen is superpowered, and all of the punches and kicks and throws are full-strength, nothing held back.  And while Kenneth Branagh has still never met a dutch angle he didn't love, the action in the film is staged well, and there are some beats and some images that push comic book language on film to places we haven't seen before.  In particular, I think everything involving Heimdall (Idris Elba) is spectacular, and I love his Observatory and the way the Bifrost works.  It is crazy, but it's also kind of beautiful.  I also really like Sif (Jaime Alexander) and the Warriors Three, Thor's compatriots.  Volstagg (Ray Stevenson), Fandral (Joshua Dallas), and Hogun (Tadanobu Asano) don't have a ton to do in the film, but they make their time onscreen count.  If they do show up in future movies, it will be a welcome return.
Beyond that, Mjolnir is made a credible weapon of choice, something I was curious about beforehand.  One of my many issues with "TRON: Legacy" was that the discs are interesting in the context of a disc wars jai alai match, but as hand-to-hand weapons, there are few things stupider than the sight of two people slapping at each other with magic frisbees.  They just didn't work, and you could practically feel the fight choreographers give up halfway through the few action scenes they even bothered to stage.  Here, there's a lot of different weaponry on display, and it all seems like actual weaponry you would use to actually kill things.  Mjolnir is pretty damn handy in a fight, and Hemsworth makes it feel like something he's comfortable using in a number of different ways.  In general, he makes his powers feel like something he's comfortable with, a lifelong part of who he is.  There's no montage in this film of him trying to learn to fly or tentatively trying out the hammer to see what it can do.  He is Thor from the very beginning.  His character arc is all about his attitudes towards the world around him, and his eventual acceptance of responsibility for his actions.
In some ways, "Thor" feels like the youngest of the Marvel movies so far, pitched squarely at a kid audience that really doesn't know the character, and that may infuriate some older fans.  I've long been afraid, though, of 30 and 40 year old men who demand that each and every movie about thunder gods and radioactive spider-men and vigilantes in batsuits be tailored directly to their appetites.  I read comic books as a kid.  They were a gateway to pulp storytelling for me, and I was rabid about them.  I don't want these movies to be serious, piercing explorations of the human soul.  I want superpowers and fights and flying and monsters, and "Thor" absolutely delivers on that level.  Branagh finds a nice tone to play with the entire cast, and there is a sense of humor to things that seems fairly low-key and gentle.  For me, the most consistent laugh in the film is the way the oh-my-god adorable Kat Dennings keeps mangling the pronunciation of "Mjolnir."
The film is true enough to its comic origins to incorporate ideas like the Rainbow Bridge, one of those things I honestly never thought I'd see anyone do in a live-action movie, and they manage to make it sort of gorgeous.  Bo Welch's production design takes some big crazy ideas and figures out a way to make it all seem fairly real.  Haris Zambarloukos, the film's cinematographer, shot one of the ugliest professionally-produced movies I've ever seen, the borderline-incompetent "Mamma Mia!", and he worried me more than Branagh walking into the film.  His work here is strong, though, and there's a burnished hyper-color quality to the world that works well.  Branagh is one of those directors who I think works very well with actors, but who has traditionally displayed a fairly wretched sense of cinema.  I still wake up in cold sweats thinking about how badly he mangled the gorgeous script for "Mary Shelly's Frankenstein," and I'll never understand what people see in "Dead Again," even if I live to be a thousand years old.  Having said that, I generally liked his work here.  I was surprised by how much I liked some of the giant-scale sequences, since I thought those might be the places where he dropped the ball, but there's one chunk of action that takes place on the Frost Giant's home planet that is very effective, and while I'll give second-unit legend Vic Armstrong some of the credit for that, it's a testament to how well Branagh was able to drop into someone else's way of doing things that it all came together as coherently as it did.
Natalie Portman is fine as Jane Foster, but it's not really a role that demands much of her.  She is basically the thing that allows Thor to finally see humans as more than these weak little backwards beings, and she's certainly pretty enough to make a god reassess our planet.  Dennings is comic relief and little more, but she is as plush and appealing as always, while Skarsgard has a few good scenes and appears to be part of the big plan for what's coming in future films.  In general, the material with SHIELD seems to organically hint at the larger Marvel Universe this time without totally overwhelming the main story in the film, and the after-the-credits beat in particular is very effective.  I thought the Hawkeye cameo in the film was utterly pointless, though, and especially for audiences who don't know the character already.  I would never guess, based on his two minutes of screentime here, that Jeremy Renner's going to play a major role in "The Avengers" next year.  He's not just inconsequential, he's useless and distracting.  It is fan service, at best, and more than anything, sort of annoying.  I also think there's a disconnect between the spectacular real environments built for Asgard and much of the CGI work, which seems to re-use certain shots several times to the point where they almost feel like stock footage.  I like the design of Asgard more than I like the way some of it was executed, and it seems odd that Digital Domain and BUF, companies that I think are among the best at environmental work, would make some of the odd mistakes they make here.
Even so, there's a whole lot of the film that I really like, and I can't wait to take both of my sons to see it.  Allen's never seen any of the Marvel movies so far, and Toshi's only seen them on home video, and even then, only selected parts of the films.  This time out, the playful nature of the film and the broad, primary-colors storytelling seems like a perfect way to finally introduce them to the world.  The 3D post-conversion is actually pretty clean and used well, and I think for kids, the immersive quality of it all will really pay off.  If "Captain America" is at least as fun as "Thor," then Marvel can rest easy until next summer, because they will have managed to introduce each one of the Avengers successfully.  The best thing I can say about this film is that it genuinely made me want to see Hemsworth arguing with Robert Downey Jr., magic versus science, and I can finally imagine the two of them occupying the same world.
"Thor" premieres in Sydney today, and will be opening in several markets before it finally hits theaters across America on May 6.

Chrishemsworththor_thumbnail

Want more of Thor?

Checkout everything there is including photos, reviews, videos and news

Go There ►

Apr 21, 2011

Marvel dumps Edward Norton from Avengers movie?

As Marvel continues to put its multi-superhero movie masterplan together, we already know that the likes of Iron Man, Captain America and, of course, Nick Fury, are set to take to the screen in 2012 for its Avengers movie. But one question mark has always been raised over where exactly Bruce Banner/The Incredible Hulk fits into the project. Not the character (who hasn't been confirmed for inclusion, but it's widely assumed that he'll be in there), rather the actor who will be playing him.

Taking the lead in the last Hulk movie was Edward Norton, and you don't have to spend much time with Google to recall rumours of just what an unhappy ship that movie's production appeared to be. Norton was reportedly unhappy with the final cut of the film, and that led to speculation that he wouldn't be taking part in The Avengers.

However, then rumours arose that Norton was in discussions with Marvel about reprising the role of Bruce Banner on the big screen, which was a surprise, but not unwelcome news.

Yet Marvel now appears to have pulled the rug. For over the weekend, it released a statement confirming that Norton would not be taking part in the film. What's particularly interesting about the statement is just how terse it is: there's no Hollywood gloss, and if you had no idea beforehand that all was not well between Norton and Marvel, it didn't leave you in much doubt by the end of it.

The statement, released by Marvel Studios' President of Production Kevin Feige to the HitFix site read:

"We have made the decision to not bring Ed Norton back to portray the title role of Bruce Banner in the Avengers. Our decision is definitely not one based on monetary factors, but instead rooted in the need for an actor who embodies the creativity and collaborative spirit of our other talented cast members. The Avengers demands players who thrive working as part of an ensemble, as evidenced by Robert, Chris H, Chris E, Sam, Scarlett, and all of our talented casts. We are looking to announce a name actor who fulfills these requirements, and is passionate about the iconic role in the coming weeks."

Ouch.

You can read the HitFix story in full here.

However, there's more. For Edward Norton's agent read the above statement too, and wasn't very happy about it at all. And now he too has released a statement, again to HitFix. His agent, Brian Swardstrom, has the following to add.

"This offensive statement from Kevin Feige at Marvel is a purposefully misleading, inappropriate attempt to paint our client in a negative light. Here are the facts: two months ago, Kevin called me and said he wanted Edward to reprise the role of Bruce Banner in The Avengers. He told me it would be his fantasy to bring Edward on stage with the rest of the cast at ComiCon and make it the event of the convention.

When I said that Edward was definitely open to this idea, Kevin was very excited and we agreed that Edward should meet with Joss Whedon to discuss the project. Edward and Joss had a very good meeting (confirmed by Feige to me) at which Edward said he was enthusiastic at the prospect of being a part of the ensemble cast. Marvel subsequently made him a financial offer to be in the film and both sides started negotiating in good faith. This past Wednesday, after several weeks of civil, uncontentious discussions, but before we had come to terms on a deal, a representative from Marvel called to say they had decided to go in another direction with the part. This seemed to us to be a financial decision but, whatever the case, it is completely their prerogative, and we accepted their decision with no hard feelings."

The full statement is here.

It's little secret that Marvel is frugal in the amount of money it pays actors for its films, and we'd be surprised if the two major contributory factors here weren't money and Norton's previous relationship with Marvel. However, we can't remember the last time we saw such a pointed statement from a film production company over a casting decision.

On the upside, it does look as though Joss Whedon is definitely down to direct The Avengers. But get ready now for another exhaustive Marvel casting process to begin, this time for The Hulk in The Avengers.

Popular Posts

Labels

Janet Jackson skanky rihanna lady gaga Beyoncé iphone american idol gay katy perry justin bieber rihanna Madonna jennifer lopez mariah carey britney spears Malaysian Airlines faghag chris brown whitney houston kim kardashian Music Charts Box-Office Results Oscars X-Factor john legend Anderson Cooper glee lindsay lohan Jason Derulo apple chris brown meows Tom Cruise michael jackson entertainment music Movie Review October 23 nicki minaj Naomi Wolf suggested videos of ISIS hostages being beheaded aren’t real adele taylor swift Charlie Hebdo Miley Cyrus Productive Habits Adam Levine Celebrity Justice Christmas Olympics kate middleton Billboard Justin Timberlake Kristen Stewart Rafael Nadal blogger christina aguilera johnny depp travel japan WordPress charlie sheen Movies grammy awards Brad Pitt Golden Globes Pope Francis robert pattinson Meow android katie holmes oprah winfrey rupert murdoch vma awards batman celebrity facebook google oprah Angelina Jolie Jay Z Jessica Sanchez Murder Obama Robin Williams The Avengers batman massacre earthquake kanye west productivity Airlines Album Review Demi Moore Guardians of the Galaxy Health Holiday Gift Giving Jennifer Aniston Jennifer Lawrence Simon Cowell born this way green lantern kris humphries luxury paris hilton philippines samsung twitter Architecture Ashton Kutcher Conrad Murray Giuliana Rancic ISIS Kylie Minogue Microsoft Prince Harry apple vs samsung christmas decoration grammy interior design iphone 5 kelly clarkson prince william Anne Hathaway Gadgets Marvel Mission Impossible 4 Technology Tim McGraw crime elton john george clooney harry potter tv Animals Boeing Fashion NOKIA The Voice blackberry captain america eminem ipad mini james bond jihadists katherine jackson news of the world 7 essential holiday programs Blind Items Bruce Jenner Chris Hemsworth Cory Monteith Ebola Fergie HTC Internet Joan Rivers Kardashians Kelly Osbourne Prometheus Shia LaBeouf Steven Spielberg arnold schwarzenegger bradley cooper casey anthony celebrity controversy daniel craig movie nuclear power plant tablet tina fey Ariana Grande Barbra Streisand Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cambridge Iggy Azalea Manny Pacquio Olympus SUPREME COURT Smartphone Steve Jobs The View Typhoon Haiyan Wissam al Mana Yolanda casey abrams galaxy gwyneth paltrow hugh jackman jennifer hudson john travolta oscar awards paris jackson photography pia toscano social networking sony spiderman tennis tiger woods trends wikileaks Alien Anthony Weiner Billboard Music Trivia Happy Birthday Jonah Falcon Karrueche Tran Las Vegas' Mandalay Bay Michael buble Music Videos Neverland Ranch Oz Politics Posterous Scotty McCreery Superman TSA Weird Al ben affleck cats fashion police happiness kelly rowland movie trailer nick cannon pope positive thinking recipe scarlett johansson star wars vatican watches world's tallest building Cameron Diaz Casper Smart Cirque du Solei Design Diana Ross Frank Ocean Happy House Tour IOS Iron Man Jeremy Renner Jollibee Ke$ha Khloe Kardashian Leonardo DiCaprio Liam Hemsworth Life MIchael Phelps Music Library NANCY GRACE Ryan Dunn Ryan Reynolds Selena Gomez The Blackstone Case The jacksons Tires Windows anti-China protest bags books calvin harris cellphone channing tatum climate change cloud computing death diet craze donald trump fashion faux pas gwen stefani halle berry harry styles henry cavill james franco jessica biel justice has been served kesha kris jenner london london riot mark wahlberg nicole scherzinger religion robert downey jr robin thicke russel brand sandra bullock sarah burton sarah jessica parker shakira snl snow white sofia vergara steven tyler super bowl usher wimbledon 2011 2012 50 cent Airbus American Music Award Amy Winehouse August 23 Barbara Walters Battleship Battleship Movie Review Benigno Aquino III Bill O'Reilly Blake Lively Blogging Celebrity Couples Chris Pratt DISNEY Diplomacy Duke of Cambridge Dwayne Johnson Elizabeth Hasselbeck Emmy Awards FCC Fifty Shades of Grey Furniture Design Gloria Arroyo Grammys Greatests Series by Rolling Stone HIV Heidi Klum IBM Instagram Jackass Jason Russell Jay Leno Jermaine Jackson Joey Kovar Jonah Hill Justice Justin Theroux L.A. Reid Lenovo Mary J Blige McDonald's Meredith Vieira Mitt Romney Movie Reviews New Year's Eve News Nicole Kidman North America One Direction Paula Abdul Racism Red Carpet Fashion Ryan Gosling Ryan Seacrest Samsung Galaxy S III Sex Act Social Media Stephen Colbert Suicide Suri TV Ratings The Hobbit Thor Tony Stewart adam lambert air travel al-qaida alec baldwin alicia keys amy poehler android vs iphone bath salt addiction best albums bobbi kristina boeing 777-9x boston marathon bombing box office cameras celebrity meltdowns celine dion ciara coffee costa concordia david letterman george michael ipad jj abrams john carter julian assange laptop lg libya meryl streep met costume institute gala nasa nexus 7 olivia munn papacy phillip phillips pink pitbull plane crash prince charles psy rosie o'donnell scientology serena williams sigourney weaver sleep snooki spaceshiptwo star trek sequel suge knight terminator thia megia transformers tsunami walking dead wardrobe malfunction weather wolverine wonder woman yahoo 007 2014 at 01:26AM 2014 at 04:59PM 2015 747 ABBA Air Crash AirAsia Airports Amanda Knox Anders Behring Breivik Andrew Garfield Andy Murray Ann Curry Ant-Man Anti-Gay Applications Ashley Tisdale Asia Avengers Ayukawa B.o.B BRIAN WILLIAMS Bam Margera Bill Clinton Bill gates Black Eyed Peas Boxing Breaking Dawn Brett Ratner Britain Bully Beating of Diabled Person CSI Cannes Carrie Underwood Catherine Middleton Catherine Zeta Jones Cee Lo Charice Charlize Theron Chaz Bono Chelsea Clinton Cheryl Cole Chinese Tourist Behaving Badly Christopher Nolan Cleaning Your Laptop Connor Cruise Contaminated Vinegar Crystal Harris Dance Destiny's Child Donna Summer Ecuador Empire State Shooting FOODIE GUIDE Fantastic 4 Fiscal Crisis Floyd Mayweather Food For Thought Forbes' List Funny Gear Genius Hacking Hate Crimes Heidi Montag Hotels and Accommodations Immigration Investments J.K. Rowling James Deen Jermaine Jones Jimmy Kimmel Jon Hamm Jordin Sparks Juan Ponce Enrile KONY2012 Kate Mara Keith Urban Kendra Wilkinson Kenneth Branagh Kung Hei Fat Choi Las Vegas Lea Michele Learning Les Hinton Lists MTV Awards Magic Mike Marc Anthony Martha Stewart Matt Bomer Matthew Morrison Michael Fassbender Miss Universe Miss World Monte Carlo Masters Muslim Naia1 Natalie Portman Nina Millin No Doubt Novak Djokovic Pacific Rim Paul McCartney Pets Phobias Queen Elizabeth II RIM ROMAN POLANSKI Rachel Crow Randy Travis Ray J Ricky Gervais Rockwell Roger Ebert Roger Federer Rooney Mara Rupert Sanders Russell Crowe Russia Ryan Air Samsung Galaxy S4 Seal Self Improvement Shirley Bassey Smallest Dog Solange Knowles Space Sports Stress Reduction Sweden Sydney Taylor Lautner Teen Choice Awards Terrorist The Bachelor The Today Show Today Show Tourism Trailer Travel Security Tumblr vs Twitter Twilight United States Web MD Whaling X-Men You Tube aaron carter acer amFar anna wintour anti-islam app ava london baauer bathroom boeing 787 bristol palin broadway caesars entertainment charize theron cher chris evans christianity clive davis cloud courtney love dark knight rises dictators; chicks digital filmmaking dining do it yourself domestic dispute drake dropbox drug laws ellen degeneres european economy extinction femme fatale filmmaker flasher germanwings crash gizmos glee cast google + haiti hank baskett harlem shake headphones health alert horror how to train your dragon immortals ipod jake gyllenhaal joe jonas john mayer kodak lance armstrong libya embassy attack life tips live nation mark basseley youssef mark bittman massacre matrix men's fashion michael j fox michelle obama mila kunis money mtv nadya suleman nancy binay naomi campbell navy yard shooting neyo nipplegate olx on the floor oscar awards show paparazzi phil collins piers morgan pop music porn industry prince princess diana qaddafi rachel zoe randy jackson recipes reese witherspoon relaxing music renee zellweger ryan murphy s4 salahi sam smith sarah palin seth mcfarlane shannon richardson shipwreck sinead o'connor singapore airlines siri skippy peanut butter snowpiercer soup spaceliner spider-man spratlys star trek super 8 superbowl tony scott tragedy treasure discovery two and a half men vertu vin diesel walkanomics web browsers woody allen world events zachary quinto 'The Adventures Of Tintin 2014 2014 at 01:17AM 2014 at 02:10PM 2014 at 03:09PM 2014 at 03:18PM 2014 at 03:37PM 2014 at 03:38PM 2014 at 03:55PM 2014 at 03:57PM 2014 at 03:58PM 2014 at 04:19PM 2014 at 04:20PM 2014 at 04:39PM 2014 at 04:41PM 2014 at 05:03PM 2014 at 05:22PM 2014 at 05:24PM 2014 at 05:42PM 2014 at 05:50PM 2014 at 05:57PM 2014 at 06:06PM 2014 at 06:14PM 2014 at 06:26PM 2014 at 06:30PM 2014 at 06:47PM 2014 at 06:48PM 2014 at 07:04PM 2014 at 07:18PM 2014 at 07:29PM 2014 at 08:51PM 2014 at 11:58PM 24 747-8 9 year old driver 9/11 9/11 Memorials ARMM AUDIO FORMATS AVIARY Aaliyah Abercrombie andamp; Fitch Adam Shankman Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys Aerosmith After Death Air Force One Aircondition Expenditure Alanis Morissette Almost Home Alopecia Amanda Seyfried Amanda Seyfried • Anne Hathaway • It's Not Easy Being A Cunt Amateur C-Section Amelia Earhart Andy Cohen Angelito Alvarez Anglican Animal Cruelty Animal Rights Animation Anita Baker Anthony Federico Aretha Franklin Artic Crisis Artist of the Year Asian Tiger Asteroid Calamity Asthma Astro Asus Padfone 2 Auschwitz Avastin Ayala BIR BPA BRIT AWARDS Baby Stealer Backstreet Boys Bank of England Bar Rafaeli Barnes andamp; Noble Baron Carrickfergus Baroness Carrickfergus Beastie Boys Beautiful Creatures Benjamin Maisani Bernie Madoff Best Original Song Best Universities Bethanie Bette Midler Betty White Beverly HIlls Cop Beverly Hills Haunted Tour Big Sean Bill Rancic Bitain's Got Talent Block House Blog Blown Away Bob McDonnell Bonnie Miller andamp; Rebecca Van Zant Botox-rama Bow Wow Bradley Manning Brand Logos Brand New Heavies Breast Feeding Bruce Sprinsteen Bruce Willis Bruno Mars Bucharest Budget Travel Burger King CANONIZATION Canada Candice Boucher CarPlay Card Speaker Caregiver Carlos slim Carrie Bradshaw Cate Blanchett Catherine Kieu Becker Catholic Celebrity Babies Celebrity Divorce Changi Airport Chelsea Manning China China Spy Ship Chinese rule Chocoholics Chris Colfer Chris Martin Chris Paul Christian Bale Christina Applegate Christina Milian Cinco De Mayo Cindy Crawford Cissy Houston Click here to add a tag to this post. Climbing Clothing Hacks Cloud Atlas Cocaine Cockpit Food Cockroach Coleman Portable Propane Coffeemaker Colgate Computer Computer Problems Computer Time Server Cool Material Cosmos Countess of Strathearn DEXTER DNSChanger malware DOTC DPWH DUMB CRIMINALS Dalai Lama Daniel Radcliffe Dark shadows Trailer David Beckham David Cameron De-Clutter Your Home Dementia Denzel Washington Department of Labor and Employment Designers Developing Stories Digital Pill Dior Homme Directors Dolphy Door Design Dotcom Dressed as men Drunk andamp; Rowdy Dzhokhar Tsarnaev EMT ESPN Earl of Strathearn Easy Broccoli Soup Ecotourism Ed Sheeran Eddie Murphy Edie Falco Edward Norton Electronics Elin Nordegren Elisabetta Canalis Elite Ellie Goulding Emily Blunt Emma Stone Encyclopedia Britannica vs. Wikipedia Erik Estrada Ethics andamp; Social Media Eva Green Eva Longoria Ex-Chief Justice Renato Corona Ex-Rutgers Student Convicted Exercise Equipment Expert Extremists Eye Laser Surgery FAA FDA Fantastic Fantastic Four Far East Movement Fartney Spears aka Britney Felix Baumgartner Felony Feng Shui Ferdinand Marcos Ferguson Festivals and Events Financial blog Flying Wallenda Focus Food Poisoning France Franklin Drilon Frozen Frugality GDP GEORGE W. Bush GLAAD Galileo Gang Related Crimes Gardening Garry Marshall Gary Devore George R.R. Martin Ghost borrowers Giant Kate Moss Falls Girls Giselle Bundchen Glee Final Season Global Nation Gong Xi Fa Cai Good Friday Good Girl Gossip / Rumors Government Greatness Greece Central School District Green Day Groot Guillermo del Toro Guy Pearce and Patrick Wilson. HOME ACCENTS Hacks Hayden Kho Hayvenhurst Home He-Man Healthy Building Design Heather Morris Hebrew Gematria Helen Mirren Hell's Angels Henry Sy Hercules HeyCheck Hiking Holiday Albums Hollywood Hacking Investigation Hong Kong Hongkong Horrible News of The Week Hugh Hefner Human Body Myths I'm Famous IFTTT ILM IMF INDECENCY INDENCY INQUIRER.net IPHONE ACCESSORY Ice Bucket Challenge Idris Elba Illuminati Imelda Marcos Indonesia Inflatable Architecture Interstellar Invisible Children Iron Lady JWoww Ja Rule Jack Black Jade Olivia Jai Courtney Jamie Dingman Jane Lynch Jane Pitt Jean-Claude Van Damme Jeb Corliss Jeremy Clarkson Jeremy Lin Jerry O’Connell Jessica Simpson Jesus Jewish Entertainers Jill Scott Jim Rash Jimi Hendrix Jimmy Choo Jimmy Fallon Joan Van Ark Joe Manganiello Joey Stefano Jokes Jon Stewart Joshua Clottey Joshua Ledet Joy Behar Julia Roberts Julianne Hough Julie Andrews Jung Ji-hoon KEVIN BACON Karen Klein Karezza Kat Von D Kate Dickie Kate Moss Kate Upton Katie Couric Katmandu Keira Knightley Kelly Preston Kids Kindle Fire Kiong Hee Huat Chai Kiong Hee Huat Tsai Kirstie Alley Kitchen Gadgets Kobe Bryant Kony Kristin Chenoweth Kyoto Protocol LTO Labor Lana Del Rey Larry Hagman Leanne Zaloumis Leap Motion Leonard NImoy Leonardo da Vinci Liberia Life of Pi Lil Scrappy Limbaugh Lockerbie Logan Marshall-Green Louis Vuitton Lucio Ran MICHAEL JORDAN MOTOROLA MWC2013 Mad Men Maksim Chmerkovskiy Malawi Mamma Mia Manny Pangilinan Marc Mezvinsky Mario Lopez Mars Mars Rover Martin Campbell Marvin Hamlisch Matthew Broderick Max Bretos Mayim Bialik McDonald Cashier Vs Customer MeeGo Meizu MX-4 Melting Polar Ice Memory Men in Black Metro Michael Keaton Michael Sams Military Minority Report Mission Impossible Mobile World Congress Modern Family Molly Ringwald Monitors Monk-Like Focus Morning Mix Most Expensive Cars Movie Heroines Mrs Carter Tour Ms WORLD Mt Etna Volcano Erupts Museum of Modern Art Mutya Keisha Siobhan NBA NBC NEW SAINTS NIagara TightRope Nancy Flatus Grace Nancy Shevell Nebulas Necrophilia Neil Armstrong Nene Leakes Nepal Netflix Networking New Year's Resolution Newt Gingrich Nida Ampaguey Nietes Vs Garcia Nipple Slips No child left behind Noah Puckerman Nokia N9 Nokor defectors Nook Noomi Rapace O-1 Visa OPtimism Obsolescence October 06 October 13 Odds andamp; Ends Oslo Bomber Overseas employment PC PETA PIPA PNoy Pablo Pancit Sa Bilao Paolo Ballesteros Passion Passive Speakers Patients Patrick Wilson Pawdele Pedring Penn State Sex Scandal Peter Jackson Peter Travers Philippine Economy Philips Philips W732 Android 4.0 smartphone Pierce Brosnan Pnk Pop Stars Popular Culture Popular Projects Portsmouth dockyard Posterous Vs Tumblr Pottermore Powerpoint Design Guide Practical Tips Prefab Development President Benigno Aquino Presidential Election Promotion Purpose Puss In Boots Queen's Diamond Concert Quiel RAV4 RECHARGEABLE BATTERY RH bill RIAA Rachel Barry Rachel Bilson Rachel Uchitel Rafe Spall Rapper Khia Razzies Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Real Housewives of Oppressive Regimes Reality Singing Competition Remember Remixes Renovations Republicans Research Resident Evil Retailers Retirement Ridley Scott Ringling Brothers Rio Robots Rockies Rolling Stone Magazine Rupert Grint Russian Dancer Russian Reset Ryan Dorsey SAF SAG Awards SEX SHARON CUNETA SHOPLIFTER SIA SOPA SSD Saga Sam Raimi Samsung Galaxy Nexus Sasha Grey Saturday Night Live Sean Harris Sean Kingston Sec Mar Roxas Self Publishing Self-Heating Canned Food Selma Senate September 04 September 05 September 07 September 10 Sesame Street Vs Rupert Murdock Set Accident Seth Grahame-Smith Sex andamp; The City Sharing Trends Sharkets Shelving Sightings Simplicity Single Girl Apartment Sir Paul McCartney Slumdog Millionaire Smash Social Media Buzz Solar Electric Propulsion Engine Sons of Guns Sony Playstation Network Sophie Cranston South Korean pop star Rain Spain Specialty Sta Rosa Stacy Schuler Star Jones State Budget Std Stephanie Beacham Steven Soderbergh Stock andamp; Forex Trading Stories Stradcom Sunshine Corazon T J Jackson TSA agent Nelson Santiago-Serrano TV Guide TV Renewals and Cancellations TV Review Tech Terra Nova Terry Gilliam ThanksGiving The Artists The Carrie Diaries The Chinese Version of Versailles The Cutest Video Of The Year The Game The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo The Hunger Games The Incredible Hulk The Maids The Mockingjay The Sabbath Commandment The Transporter The Wanted Theater Musical Theft Thrifts Tibet Tibetan Monastery Tibetan monks Tionne “T-Boz” Watkins Titanic Memorabilia Tom Felton Tom Hardy Tony Abbott Tony Bennett Top Scams of the Year Touch Software Toulouse School Shooting Tour of Beijing Toyota Trade Deals Train Vs Taxi TransAsia Airways; Airline Crashes Transportation Tron Cycle True Blood Tumblr Tweeter U2 UB40 UK Music Chart UK's Favorite UNA US US Ambassador US Citizenship Ukraine Ultra HD Transmission Underwear Bomber Uptown Funk Urban Landscapes VIRGIN MARY Vatican Archives Venice Is Sinking Verger Versailles Viral Videos Visanthe Shiancoe Voice Search WHO Wallis Simpson War Horse Watch Safe Watch What Happens Water What to Expect When Your Expecting Whoppi Goldberg WiFi-CERTIFIED Will.i.am Wish list Women's Health Women's Travel World Bank Writing X Men You Will Die YouTube Zac Efron Zsazsa Zaturnnah [Forget] You a380 aac aboitiz accessories accidental deaths acm actress adam sandler adrianne palicki aegis missile agent carter aging aging celebrities aiff air hostess alcohol alesha dixon alexander mcqueen aliens alphabet amanda bynes amazon amtrak amusement park accidents amy's baking company anal infraction ang lee angela bassett angela merkel angry brd anorexia anthony vincent anti-dynasty bill ape apollo 18 apple crisp recipes apple ipad2 apple lossless apple tv apple vs amazon ariel winter artic warming ashton kucher asian market aspirations astronaut hadfield autism auto avatar2 avril lavigne azealia banks balcony strip dancer bank of america barbie doll barcelona battery bb pilipinas bear attack benedict cumberbatch benjamin antoine maisani best of beyonce bible bill cosby bill hader billboard hangmen billy crystal birdman birthday celebrants bodybuilding boko haram boob job boy george boyfriend brett michaels budget hotels budgeting bus salary scheme cable tv caesae salad californian hannibal lecter camiguin cancer canon eos car accident car thieves cardinals career carjacking cars carson daly cat hoarder cathay pacific catholic church cbs celebrity wealth celebrity weight issues cell sites champagne charging charlie hunnam chelsea handler cheney assassination squad chick flick chicken adobo chihuahua vs thieves child care china high speed trains christopher dorner christopher gaida church of England circumcision cleaning a grater clint eastwood closet clean up cloud service cnn coldplay commercials communist insurgent community complaint letter computer sales concert concert boxoffice conservative contagion continental cop cop18 copyright corrupt philippine goverment offiials corruption cosmic speed limit counterfeit goods cowboys andamp; aliens crackle creativity crematorium scandal cricket croco ton cruelity crying babies cunt dad dakota fanning dan abrams dane cook daphne guinness darren young dating david arquette david bowie david furnish dea deathly hallows debt freedom decor deforestation delta airlines demi lovato demolition devil dark skin diana agron diane sawyer digital music dina lohan dinosaurs dior divine comedy do it yourself projects doctor doctor burnout document scanner dog dognapping dollar coin dolls dolphin domestic abuse dominique strauss kahn donate your body doug bliss downton abbey dreamworks dual SIM dubai duch durrell conservation trust dustin lance e-mail earbuds earnings economy edgar allen poe edible deodorant edox el-Qaddafi elizabeth taylor elizabeth vargas email embalming emma watson end of posterous end of the world 2012 erectile dysfunction esperanza spalding estate eva langoria evernote evernote smart notebook evita evolution execution expendables2 expensive extant fake blog fake gangster farrah abraham feuds fiat file-syncing service financials finn hudson flac flight attendants florence + the machine florida homicide flyers rights footloose fox news fridgeezoo funny videos gaddafi gadhafi galaxy 8 galaxy note gambling game of thrones games gangster garage sale gay priest gayle king gays geneva motor show girl gone wild global climate change global warming globe telecom good morning america google drive google keep google tablets google vs microsoft goverment graft gravity great deals greatest artsts 2012 green technology groupon hacker hacktivity hairdye hairstyle halftime show halloween costume hangover happy april fool's day happy faces hard drive harrison ford hawk-eye hawkeye hazel heal hello kitty hero of the day histogram hitler holdup ito hollywood homophobes horse meat how to! howard stern howie mandel hudson hugo chavez human extinction humanity hybrid automobiles i-mate iFixit iMac iTunes Match ian mckellen india india gang rape indian vaginal tightening gel inner mongolia insidious:chapter 2 intel interview invisible ios7 iphone 4S iraq islam jack bauer jada pinkett smith james cameron james foley james macavoy january jones jason london java jeff probst jessica alba jimmy jam jinggoy estrada joan jett joe jackson john galliano joseph estrada josh duhamel juelz santana julie taymor justice league justin deeley jv ejercito kaley cuoco kara dioguardi kat graham kate gosselin kate hudson kate major katherine heigl katherine mcphee kathy griffin kc concepcion keanu reeves keurig kevin clash keyboard maestro kidnapping kiefer sutherland kill switch kingsman kirk cameron kit haringtonn kitchen annoyance kitchen nightmares kris aquino kristen dunst kristen johnston kristen wiig kuffar lauren alaina laurieann gibson lauryn hill leann rimes leggings lena dunham leon brittan les mis lesbian lil' kim lincoln live it up liza minnelli lorde loud tour on fire louvre love luke evans macbeth malaria malaria vaccine mammogram manic moments manila maria menounos maria schriver maria shriver mariah jeter maroon 5 married with children martini mashable mathew beckerman matt damon matt lauer measurments media megan fox megaupload mel b melissa gorga mens fashion mercedes benz messaging metallica michael arceneaux michael douglas michelle williams micron micropigs mifi mistaken identity mj tribute mobile pay mog monarchy monsters morgan freeman morning wood morrissey motivation motorcycle motorola tablet motown mountaineers movie posters mp3 mt banahaw museum mushroom myspace names naspers natalie wood natural disaster naya rivera near field communication nelly furtado new home buyer new structures new york new zealand nick jonas nicks santino nielsen ratings nobel node electric outlet noma nominations nonoy aquino novels npa nsync nuclear reactor workers nudists nudity number ones numbers nutmeg oblivion octomom office equipments ofws old navy oliver martinez organization osbournes oscar pistorius overpaid actors in hollywood oxymoron pain pandora app papal resignation papal visit paper wallet party passwords paula deen pbs pdf penis collector pepsi perez hilton pete cashmore pga tour vs tiger pharell photobomb picassa piolo pascual pizza planet mogo plastic surgery playboy pnr polaroid posthaven power networker predictions prints prison system profits andamp; losses puregold IPO quotes rabies radioactive cars ramona revilla rango rape ratings razzie award real people reality tv red wine redone relationships republican restaurant rice cakes richard branson richard simmons ridiculously good-looking surgery baby riri roads roast chicken. recipe rodney king ron weasley rotten romatoes routine physical fitness royal phone prank rue mcclanahan rug ruler style running shoe finder sacrifice sad story safe cities salma hayek saln sam worthington samsung vs apple samy bouzaglo savage attack saw science sean penn self-immolation selfridges sequels serial killers server seth rogen sexology shamcey supsup shane black shark vs grouper sharks sharon osbourne shield shiitake shoes shopping shrimp sikh temple gunman skydrive skynet slutty halloween costume small furniture smart audio smart city smart communications smelly socks snapdragon s4 pro sneakers snooker socks socrates villegas solar storm space oddity space x spacestation sparkle speaker system speakers spencer pratt spike spy fiction starbucks rant song staycation stereo stevie nicks streaming submarine sugarsync suits sulit.com.ph survivor susan sarandon swarosvski symbianOS tablets tag heuer taliban talk that talk tattoo tea party ted danson teenage mutant ninja turtles television series terry lewis thatcher the end of posterous the hot lists the interview the raven the ring 3 the situation the tenth parallel theme park then andamp; now ticketmaster tilda swinton till the world ends tim burton timbaland tina turner tiredness titanic titanic redone tmz tom hanks tom hooper toni braxton tony gilroy top earning grammy winners 2012 tortoises tourette toys tracy morgan trade in your iphone training program trance transformation transgender trends; sexiest women tribute trivia tv shows tweet twittad tyler posey typhoon mina tyra banks tyson beckford uasp ubuntu uk phone jacking scandal unicef urbanization vacitan vaginas valentines day vanilli vatican bar versace vesta viagra victoria jackson video.learning visibility visible vizio voltron volvo w w.e. wall street protest wallet warner brothers warren buffet watch wav wearable blanket whisky wifi wikipedia will smith william morris window dressing wireless charger word words world affairs wyclef wyclef jean zite zoe saldana zoo

Sample Text