Hugh Jackman’s final display of bulging biceps and blood-soaked claws – aka The Wolverine 3 – is going to be a mature sequel. That’s a fancy way of saying that Fox is eyeballing an R-rating for Logan’s next adventure, which is reportedly going to be “very violent,” a description that’s not that surprising when considering its source material. With Wolvie’s involvement in X-Men: Apocalypse still unconfirmed – although he’s rumored to make an appearance in the next trailer – we simply don’t know when on the mutant franchise timeline his threequel will take place.
Well, we kinda do. One of Fox’s chief comic book producers, Simon Kinberg, has dropped the tiniest sliver of info concerning the film. You ready? Okay:
“The Wolverine movie takes place in the future.”
It’s not much to go on as Kinberg could of course be referring to ten seconds after the...
Well, we kinda do. One of Fox’s chief comic book producers, Simon Kinberg, has dropped the tiniest sliver of info concerning the film. You ready? Okay:
“The Wolverine movie takes place in the future.”
It’s not much to go on as Kinberg could of course be referring to ten seconds after the...
- 4/14/2016
- by Gem Seddon
- We Got This Covered
Directed by: Sidney J. Furie
Written by: Nathan Juran, James Kelley, Peter Miller
Cast: Kieron Moore, Hazel Court, Ian Hunter, Kenneth J. Warren
Mod DVDs are a boon to genre movie fans. Studios are releasing movies that wouldn't generate enough profits to make a wide release feasible, thus allowing fans to purchase films that might have remained in a vault forever. The cost is a bit of an issue (you can't wait for these titles to end up in a Walmart dump bin sale), but at least one can buy a decent quality DVD without resorting to bootleg copies.
That said, I doubt many horror fans were clamoring for Doctor Blood's Coffin, a recent addition to the MGM Limited Edition Collection. While the film does feature the lovely Hazel Court, its plodding story and lack of monster action dooms this 1961 British horror film to being little more than a decent time-waster you'd catch on television.
Written by: Nathan Juran, James Kelley, Peter Miller
Cast: Kieron Moore, Hazel Court, Ian Hunter, Kenneth J. Warren
Mod DVDs are a boon to genre movie fans. Studios are releasing movies that wouldn't generate enough profits to make a wide release feasible, thus allowing fans to purchase films that might have remained in a vault forever. The cost is a bit of an issue (you can't wait for these titles to end up in a Walmart dump bin sale), but at least one can buy a decent quality DVD without resorting to bootleg copies.
That said, I doubt many horror fans were clamoring for Doctor Blood's Coffin, a recent addition to the MGM Limited Edition Collection. While the film does feature the lovely Hazel Court, its plodding story and lack of monster action dooms this 1961 British horror film to being little more than a decent time-waster you'd catch on television.
- 12/26/2011
- by Chris McMillan
- Planet Fury
After all that hoopla of cities vying to get Google’s first--free!--ultra high-speed broadband network (you know, cities renaming themselves “Google,” mayors swimming with sharks), it turns out that the company is bestowing those riches on none other than its next-door neighbor: Stanford University.
Technically, it’s just a beta. Writing on The Official Google Blog, product manager James Kelly says, “This trial is completely separate from our community selection process for Google Fiber…. Stanford’s Residential Subdivision--our first ‘beta’ deployment to real customers--will be a key step towards that goal.”
Kelly says Google chose the Residential Subdivisions, a group of 850 faculty- and staff-owned homes on the university’s campus, as their test community because of Stanford’s willingness to let them experiment with new fiber technologies on its streets. “The layout of the residential neighborhoods and small number of homes make it a good fit for a beta deployment,...
Technically, it’s just a beta. Writing on The Official Google Blog, product manager James Kelly says, “This trial is completely separate from our community selection process for Google Fiber…. Stanford’s Residential Subdivision--our first ‘beta’ deployment to real customers--will be a key step towards that goal.”
Kelly says Google chose the Residential Subdivisions, a group of 850 faculty- and staff-owned homes on the university’s campus, as their test community because of Stanford’s willingness to let them experiment with new fiber technologies on its streets. “The layout of the residential neighborhoods and small number of homes make it a good fit for a beta deployment,...
- 10/21/2010
- by E.B. Boyd
- Fast Company
Scholars from around the world are dissecting the Springsteen legend this weekend in New Jersey. "Glory Days: A Bruce Springsteen Symposium" continues through Sunday at Monmouth University. The no-holds-barred intellectual romp, coinciding with Springsteen's 60th birthday, was organized by Virginia Tech and Penn State Altoona.And yes, the scholars do get the comedic irony of studying a man who "learned more from a three-minute record than he ever learned from school."The festivities include several pilgrimages to the landmark Stone Pony nightclub, down the road in Asbury Park, N.J.Educators spent Friday night singing, hollering and chanting a curse phrase at the impish urging of rock pioneer Gary U.S. Bonds, whose performance brought the house down. Springsteen resurrected Bonds' career in the '80s by writing his comeback hit, "This Little Girl."Professors, many of them veterans of dozens of concerts . one...
- 9/26/2009
- Filmicafe
Field Dress. Clockwise from top left: Holly and Sam Branson; Poppy and Chloe Delevigne; Matthew Williamson and James Kelly; Anna Friel and Arnaud Bamberger; Henry Beckwith and Gerri Halliwell; and Susan Warren and Guy Pelly. Courtesy of Cartier Polo. Blustery winds tossed plastic champagne flutes and tousled ladies’ updos, but that didn’t stop a jovial crew from swarming the fields last weekend at Cartier International Polo day for some good old-fashioned divot stomping. More than 30,000 people descended upon the Guards Polo Club at Windsor Great Park, outside London, only to witness the English squander the Coronation Cup to Argentine Adolfo Cambiaso and his team. But this particular annual match is more about people-watching than the sport, as the ponies were eclipsed by socialites and Spice Girls in the grandstands.
- 7/28/2009
- Vanity Fair
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