Author: BRWC

  • Jean-Claude Van Damme & Other Classic Action Stars

    Jean-Claude Van Damme & Other Classic Action Stars

    With Jean-Claude Van Damme hitting the big screen in KICKBOXER: VENGEANCE (a remake of his 1989 smash hit) we decided to find out who is the greatest of the legendary Eighties action heroes. Who kicked hardest, fought longest and has the staying power to be the last man standing? Let the fight begin!

    Sylvester Stallone

    Evidence: Sylvester Stallone is not only an enduring action star of note – from Rambo and Rocky, Cobra to Cliffhanger, right through to The Expendables, Sly has always set the box office cash tills ringing; but he is also an Oscar-nominated writer, a director, and even a painter. There is, it seems, very little he cannot do.

    Verdict: Stallone is more rennaisance man than action hero king.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=elpaRzwICMk

    Dolph Lundgren

    Evidence: At 6ft 5 and built like a Sherman tank, Swedish powerhouse Lundgren has taken on James Bond and Rocky, played The Punisher, a Universal Soldier and was one of The Expendables. He is not only a martial arts expert, but a brainbox, with a masters in chemical engineering. He’s still making lots of films, and has also branched out into fitness training.

    Verdict: Dolph is a superstar, but like Drago in Rocky IV, he’s not the champ.

    Arnold Schwarzenegger

    Evidence: Former Mr Universe Arnie ruled the Eighties with a string of box office hits including Conan The Barbarian, The Terminator, Commando, Predator, The Running Man… the list goes on. The Terminator sequels maintained his box office clout, but then Arnie moved into politics, becoming the Governor of California, and seemed to put his action hero days behind him. He’s come back to the cinema, with the likes of The Expendables and a rumoured new Conan film in the works. But, at 69, it is nearly time to hang up his Uzi.

    Verdict: Close, but no cigar, Arnold

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nv0Jc4ziS-U

    Chuck Norris

    Evidence: All through the Eighties the one man army that is Chuck Norris kicked ass in a series of no nonsense action flicks that saw the bad guys beaten down into the dust in films like The Octagon, An Eye For An Eye, Silent Rage, Forced Vengeance and Missing in Action. Chuck’s martial arts prowess is second to none. Still going strong, this is one action hero you don’t want to get on the wrong side of.

    Verdict: Chuck Norris fought the verdict. And left it for dead.

    Jean-Claude Van Damme 

    Evidence: In KICKBOXER: VENGEANCE, Van Damme, at 55, is as spry, nimble and dangerous as any of the onscreen counterparts half his age – plus he still has charisma to burn. Van Damme has made over sixty films (including classics of the genre including Double Impact, Streetfighter, Hard Target, and Universal Soldier), had his own reality TV show, and is not averse to sending himself up onscreen in the likes of JCVD. And, as The Muscles from Brussels, he has the best nickname.

    Verdict: You win, Jean-Claude.

    Kickboxer: Vengeance is available now on video on demand and in select cinemas from Kaleidoscope Entertainment.

  • Dave Bautista Is Action Cinema’s Next Big Thing

    Dave Bautista Is Action Cinema’s Next Big Thing

    After huge roles in Spectre and Guardians of the Galaxy, and playing the fearsome lead bad guy in KICKBOXER: VENGEANCE, Dave Bautista is on his way to being the next Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson. Here are 10 good reasons why Bautista is not only about to take over action cinema, but he’s gonna pulverise anyone who dares get in his way…

    1. HE CAN REALLY ACT

    Unlike a lot of so-called action stars, lunkheads who have cracked one too many breeze block with their forehead, Bautista has got real acting chops. Check out this screen test from the box office smash Guardians of the Galaxy, where Bautista holds his own against the brilliant Chris Pratt. What do expect -Bautista studied Shakespeare.

    2. HE MAKES A GREAT VILLAIN

    You don’t have to look any further than his diabolically nasty role as the dark and dangerous Tong Po in KICKBOXER: VENGEANCE to see that Bautista can do ‘evil’ worryingly well.

    3. … AND A FANTASTIC GOOD GUY

    Having said that, he was one of the good guys in the brilliant sci-fi blockbuster, Guardians of the Galaxy, one of last year’s biggest films. As Drax, criminal turned Guardian, Bautista even got himself immortalised in a toy figure from the film.

    4. HE’S BIG

    At over 6 ft 4 inches, he is a good five inches taller than Fast & Furious star Vin Deisel. Which, in effect, makes him a bigger action movie star, doesn’t it?

    5. HE’S HANDSOME

    Aside from his physique, Bautista is blessed with film star looks. It’s not just action film stars that should be worried – Hollywood hunks in general should be mighty worried.

    6. THE FANS LOVE HIM

    He’s known as one of the nicest guys in the business, and the fans love him for it. Since his wrestling days through to his Hollywood stardom, he’s happy to stop, sign and autograph or have a selfie taken… As the man himself says: “I’m not a big guy. I’m not a menacing guy. I’m not an intimidating guy.” And, as this fan finds out, he doesn’t mind a bit of ribbing!

    7. HE HATES BULLIES

    “There’s nothing bullyish about me, you know. If there’s anybody who’s anti-bully, it’s me.” Is there anyone else you’d rather have on your team?

    8. HE’S ALREADY A CINEMA LEGEND

    Going toe to toe with Bond on a train basically makes you a cinema immortal. When Roger Moore’s James Bond fought Tee Hee (Julius Harris) on a train in Live and Let Die, Harris became ingrained on the cinemagoers mind as one of the great villains. Watch this clip from Spectre to see Bautista do the same.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QeKIbD9CqZk

    9. HE’S MIGHTY AT THE BOX OFFICE

    Two of the films Bautista starred in – Spectre and Guardians of the Galaxy – grossed between them over an astonishing $1.5 billion! You do the maths…

    10. HE’S GOT STAYING POWER

    Bautista has got more projects lined up than Dwayne Johnson has had fruit smoothies. Thanks to the success of Guardians and Spectre, producers have been beating a path to Bautista’s door and he’ll soon be seen in the new Bladerunner sequel, Luc Besson action flick Warrior’s Gate, Final Score, as well as Guardians of the Galaxy 2 and the next Avengers film.

    Kickboxer: Vengeance is available now on video on demand and in select cinemas from Kaleidoscope Entertainment.

  • The Best Worst Partnerships In Movies

    The Best Worst Partnerships In Movies

    The odd couple … a tried and tested Hollywood staple that never felt new but that somehow also never gets old. This year’s The Nice Guys, available on Digital HD, Blu-ray and DVD from September 26th courtesy of Icon Film Distribution, brought the trope bang up to date by revisiting the 1970s and delivered one of the funniest, most vital and brilliantly action-packed films of the year to boot. To celebrate that, we thought we’d have a look at some of the best worst partnerships to grace the screen

    THE NICE GUYS

    Shane Black directing the previously untapped slapstick comedy chops of Ryan Gosling whilst also giving Russell Crowe the comedy vehicle of his career? Sold! The Nice Guys follows a down-at-heel, usually drunk private eye and a curmudgeonly, INCREDIBLY HARD Hollywood fixer as they become entwined in an attempt to cover up scandal in the motor industry and the porn film that threatens to reveal the truth. Rarely has a screen partnership sizzled like this, and rarely have either lead looked like they’re having this much fun. Peppered with the one liners and singular verve Shane Black fans have come to expect and far more people should experience, The Nice Guys might just be the best film this year you’ve yet to see. Change that! Do it now!

    THE HEAT

    Odd couple pairings have a notable tendency to involve two sets of testicles so Paul Feig’s hilarious buddy movie featuring Sandra Bullock (uptight, plays by the book) and Melissa McCarthy (foul-mouthed, slob, loose canon) was as much an oestrogen-filled breath of fresh air as it was really, really funny. An FBI agent shunned by her colleagues is forced to team up with a Boston cop who terrifies hers and, for once, genuine hilarity ensues.

    TED

    Seth McFarlane has become known for having something of a leftfield imagination – just see some of the cutaways on Family Guy if you’re in any doubt – so it should come as no surprise that when he opted to find cinema’s latest odd couple he opted for a sentient bear and, well, Mark Wahlberg. Anyone who saw Wahlberg on the Graham Norton Show will be keenly aware that he’s got the odd well and truly covered but Ted employs a surprising amount of heart in an amongst the gross-out gags. Sequel missed the mark, though.

    21 JUMP STREET

    From the brains who ultimately brought you The LEGO Movie, 21 Jump Street takes a comparatively obscure 90s drama starring Johnny Depp and turns it into a laugh out loud buddy comedy about two clearly in their 30s cops infiltrating a high school drugs ring. Dave Franco impresses as the villain of the piece but it’s Channing Tatum and Jonah Hill who have the best time (and the best lines) as they find the high school tables turned the second time around. Watch out for the pair realising they’re high just as a teacher asks for their attention.

    THE LION KING

    What? Animated pairings can be mismatched too, and surely that’s the very essence of hakuna mattata, no? Timon and Pumba (weasely meerkat thing and warthog, respectively) should be different links on the same food chain, even more so when they take the young Simba under their wing, but instead the pair defines friendship, their common denominator being a distinct lack of smarts combined with an especially healthy survival instinct. See, we’re stronger together, and all that.

    48 HOURS

    1980s buddy movies had the slightly queasy notion that what made a couple odd was differing race. Thankfully things have moved on a bit from that point but this classic starring a (then sober) Nick Nolte and a rising star known as Eddie Murphy does at least stand out for putting them from polar opposite sides of the track, with race coming far down the list. Nolte is a cop after two vicious killers, Murphy the bank robber he springs from prison for the titular time period to help track them down.

    THE ODD COUPLE

    And the film that started it all. The Odd Couple stars Walter Matthau and Jack Lemmon as mismatched flat sharers forced to deal with respective anal retentiveness and abject slobbishness – or die trying. The film was so influential that it spawned a sequel and two TV series, but just as with every other time Matthau and Lemmon paired, the original cannot be beaten. Essential viewing regardless of your tastes or preferences.

    The Nice Guys is available on Digital HD, Blu-ray and DVD from September 26th, courtesy of Icon Film Distribution

  • Best First Dates On Film

    Best First Dates On Film

    The first date. An event that strikes fear into the hearts of everyone. For many, it can be daunting, intimidating and even frightening. It’s an event that could easily make or break a relationship, and needs to be planned just right. Luckily, we can easily take a note from our favourite movies for great first date experiences and inspiration.

    The latest film that will no doubt inspire a whole generation of young lovers is Southside With You, a romantic comedy-drama that follows a young Barack Obama and Michelle Robinson as they spend an afternoon together in Chicago’s south side in the summer of 1989. What happened on that fateful day planted the seeds for one of the most powerful relationships in the world.

    From spending a night with a stranger in a different city to serenading an acquaintance in a music shop to find a common interest, we’ve rounded up the best dates in films.

    Southside With You (2016)

    Inspired by accounts of the first couple’s first date, Richard Tanne’s romantic and intimate directorial debut Southside With You follows the story of the charming first-year law associate Barack Obama (Parker Sawyers), as he takes reluctant attorney Michelle Robinson (Tika Sumpter) on a daylong trip in and around Chicago’s South Side in 1989. The pair spend the day bonding over their personal and political aspirations – Michelle to empower women and Barack to hold a position of influence in Civil Rights. Although the pair have no inkling they will someday make history together, their date marks the first spark of romance between the future first couple, making this sweet and inspiring love story all the more poignant.

    Like Crazy – 2011

    Go karts and walks on the beach sound like a perfect date for this crazy-in-love couple, who would do anything to be together. Like Crazy tells the story of Anna (Felicity Jones), a British exchange student who falls in love with Jacob (Anton Yelchin), an American. Everything seems perfect for the couple, who plan their future together after university, but they’re pulled apart when Anna is denied re-entry into the United States after staying in the country longer than her student visa allows. As a result, they’re forced to move on with their lives, though they never forget about each other. But it’s the moments where they reunite after being an ocean apart that’s undeniably beautiful. The actors were free to improvise much of the dialogue, with director Drake Doremus compiling only a 50-page outline of what would happen.

    Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist – 2008

    The Big Apple really does never sleep in this adaptation of Rachel Cohn and David Levithan’s 2006 novel of the same name. Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist tells the story of teenagers Nick (Michael Cera) and Norah (Kat Dennings) who form a bond through their love of music. Their romance starts off as a rocky one, as they meet when Norah asks Nick to pretend to be her boyfriend for five minutes to show up a mean girl at a high-school party. What then transpires is a crusade through New York City at night as they try to find their favourite band’s secret show and look for Noah’s drunken best friend who’s gone missing. The film illustrates the craziness of young love and how one night can change everything.

    Once – 2007

    The entirety of John Carney’s Oscar-winning film follows two unnamed people as they bond through their love of music. They meet when the girl (Markéta Irglová) sees the guy (Glen Hansard) busk in the heart of Dublin. She’s immediately lured by his music, but is more delighted to learn that he repairs hoovers and insists that he fixes her broken hoover. She also tells him that she’s a musician, and their first proper musical encounter is when we fall in love with them. The song they perform, ‘Falling Slowly’ won the Oscar for best original song, and it’s pretty clear that this is the moment that they fell in love with each other too. They never admit it because for them, they find musical solace within each other as a way to escape from their broken lives.

    The Notebook – 2004

    The date that the lead characters Noah Calhoun (Ryan Gosling) and Allie Hamilton (Rachel McAdams) go on has gone down as one of the most memorable in rom-com history. The night ends on their first date with Noah and Allie nearly run over by a car when they spontaneously decide to lay on the road and dance in the street without music. The Notebook, adapted from Nicholas Sparks’ 1996 novel, follows the courtship of Noah and Allie, a young couple who fall in love in the 1940’s, despite being from different worlds. But their love for each other isn’t enough to hold their relationship together; they are soon torn apart because of their social differences. The film has gained a rabid cult following since its release, while Gosling and McAdams’ on-screen chemistry was praised.

    Amélie – 2001

    The BAFTA-award winning Amélie was an instant hit and became one of the most well known French films of all time. It stars Audrey Tautou as the titular Amélie Poulain, a shy waitress struggling with isolation, who finds bliss by devoting her life to the people around her. She resorts her own life to a fantastical world, and she dreams of love and beauty. But in doing so, Amélie begins to leave behind her own life and her own quest for love until she meets Nino Quincampoix (Mathieu Kassovitz), a quirky young man who Amélie gradually ends up falling in love with. This French classic is a feel-good charmer that showcases Tautou as a delightful heroine, and introduced her to a wider international audience.

    10 Things I Hate About You – 1999

    10 Things I Hate About You is perhaps mostly remembered either for Julia Stiles’ love poem, or Heath Ledger singing his heart out with ‘Can’t Take My Eyes Off Of You’. But the date that their characters, Kat and Patrick, go on is one of the most romantic scenes in the film. After she helps him sneak out of detention, they take a paddleboat out to an island, shoot paintballs at each other and have their first kiss in the hay. The film, which is loosely based on Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew, follows new student Cameron James (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) who tries to date Bianca Stanford (Larisa Oleynik). In an attempt to get around her father’s strict rules on dating, he gets ‘bad boy’ Patrick (Ledger) to date her goody two-shoes sister Kat (Stiles). This was Ledger’s first American film, beating out Josh Hartnett and Ashton Kutcher for the role.

    Before Sunrise – 1995

    Before Sunrise is essentially a feature-length date that follows two strangers, Céline (Julie Delpy) and Jesse (Ethan Hawke), who meet on a train and gradually fall in love over the course of a long night in Vienna. They spend their limited time together walking around the idyllic city, believing that they will never see each other again. This allows them to open up to each other, revealing more about themselves than they normally would and the chemistry is made so much more powerful by what’s left unsaid. The lead actors were allowed to make changes to director Richard Linklater’s script, which he wrote in eleven days and is largely based on a personal experience. The film gained two sequels (which were both nominated for the best adapted screenplay Oscar) and the series was showered with critical acclaim for the simplicity of its straightforward premise.

    Say Anything – 1989

    John Cusack’s infamous boombox serenade is immediately the standout scene from Say Anything. Cameron Crowe’s pitch-perfect post-high school love story, which also stars Ione Skye, follows aspiring kickboxer Lloyd Dobler (Cusack) who falls for valedictorian Diane Court (Skye) at their high school graduation ceremony. As they begin to fall in love, their relationship hits a bump in the road when Diane’s father tells her to break up with Lloyd. That’s when Lloyd goes to her house at dawn with a boombox, blasting out the track ‘In Your Eyes’ by Peter Gabriel, a song Diane loves. Cusack holding the boombox high above his head is the defining moment of the film, and a proud and unapologetic symbol of young love that defines old-school movie romance.

    Pretty In Pink – 1986

    The Howard Deutch-directed rom-com is perhaps remembered for its soundtrack, but the romance of the film is probably what contributes to its status as a cult classic. The film stars Molly Ringwald as Andie Walsh, a working-class high school girl who finds herself torn between two different guys, Duckie (Jon Cryer) her friend who’s always had a crush on her and Blane (Andrew McCarthy), the rich boy who she immediately likes. The final scenes of the film are the most iconic ones. Andie ends up making an important decision at the high-school prom, though it was meant to swing in the other direction; even writer John Hughes was allegedly unhappy with the ending. Nevertheless, the film is remembered as being a cult classic that defied the barriers of class and social cliques.

    Southside With You is in cinemas 30 September 2016.

  • Breaking The Mould: It’s Not Easy Being Typecast

    Breaking The Mould: It’s Not Easy Being Typecast

    It’s not easy being typecast. You rock up for the audition, super keen to play an emotionally challenged romantic lead in what is promised to be the biggest hit of the year, but all the casting director sees is your genre-re-defining role in that silent post apocalyptic expressionist action film that your fans won’t leave you alone about. What’s an actor to do?!

    Fortunately, as The Nice Guys – out on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital HD from September 26th courtesy of Icon Film Distribution – shows, it is possible to break out of that mould and occasionally try something a bit different, and we’ve selected some of the best examples of this in honour of Shane Black’s riotous, hilarious triumph:

    Ryan Gosling – The Nice Guys

    It’s a truth universally acknowledged that Ryan Gosling is perfect. In. Every. Way. He’s marked himself out as a witty, humble interviewee and is well on his way to being one of the actors of his generation thanks to the likes of Drive, Crazy Stupid Love and the heartbreaking Blue Valentine. But the comic foil in a buddy movie? That’s something he’s never seemingly got around to until this year’s The Nice Guys which sees him star alongside Russell Crowe’s man-mountain of an enforcer as a down on his luck and very, very alcoholic private investigator. Whether he’s dumping rotting corpses onto unsuspecting dinner tables or taking his daughter to drug-fuelled porn parties, there really isn’t a thing this loser gets right, something that’s made all the more effective for the fact that he’s, well, perfect, perfect Ryan Gosling.

    Charlize Theron – Monster

    There’s a fine line between a publicity stunt and going over-and-above for a role but no-one ever expected the off-the-scale-beautiful Charlize Theron to tread that line as effectively as she did for her incendiary performance as female serial killer Aileen Wuornos in Monster. No one would ever have imagined the bloated, blotchy and, well, pathologically violent Wuornos rocking a gold dress as she mouthed ‘J’adore, Dior’, so it’s entirely to Theron’s credit that she so successfully removed any suggestion that the lead in Patty Jenkin’s instant classic was ever anything in the same realm as a South African supermodel.

    Tom Cruise – Tropic Thunder

    Tom Cruise has, for his entire career, enjoyed his status as leading man, delivering square jawed hero after square jawed hero, mixing things up from time to time (such as with his performance as the Vampire Lestat in Interview With The Vampire), but no one was prepared for his scene-stealing performance in Tropic Thunder. Playing a disgusting, over the top and definitely unhinged studio boss called Les Grossman, Cruise shocked and impressed in equal measure, revealing hitherto undiscovered comic chops and standing out as the funniest thing in a really very funny movie that also features star turns from Jack Black, Robert Downey Jr and Ben Stiller. No mean feat.

    Daniel Radcliffe – Imperium/Equus

    Daniel Radcliffe will seemingly go to any lengths to try and exorcise the ghost of Harry Potter (although not if rumours of a new trilogy based on Harry Potter and the Cursed Child are to be believed). He first struck out taking on the (very naked) lead in a stage revival of Equus – to universal acclaim – but it is arguably his latest performance in the riveting Imperium that will shock Potter fans the most. Playing an undercover FBI agent forced to infiltrate a group of white supremacists, Radcliffe utters the kind of hateful, racist language that would see Mrs Weasley send more than a sternly worded Howler and that would cause his beloved Dumbledore to spin in his grave.

    Jennifer Aniston/Colin Farrell – Horrible Bosses

    Jennifer Aniston, hot from being everyone’s favourite Friend, took on a range of film roles that, shall we say, didn’t exactly set the world on fire. Likewise, Colin Farrell, fresh from sex tape hell (seriously, never watch it if you’re fond of your sanity), was very familiar to audiences for a series of thrillers and dramas in which never looked anything other than his Celtic best. Horrible Bosses changed things for both of them with Aniston shocking as a sex-obsessed dentist with a mouth not suitable for kissing mothers with, whilst Farrell clearly had a blast as a balding, vulgar salesman who can’t believe his luck when he inherits the family business. Both comedy gold.

    Jim Carrey – Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind

    Famed for a series of googly-eyed, facially gymnastic roles in broad comedies like Liar, Liar, Dumb & Dumber and The Mask, Jim Carrey took a leftfield turn to star opposite Kate Winslet in French auteur Michel Gondry’s beautifully melancholy Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind. There’d been no previous suggestion that Carrey was capable of underplaying anything, or that he had a particular interest in French existential drama but while Kate Winslet impressed with a purple rinse, it was Ace Ventura himself who really impressed with a performance so far south of what we’d been used to that a whole new strand of his career opened up before our very eyes.

    Martin Scorsese – Hugo

    One rarely thinks of Scorsese in the same arena as heart-warming imaginative children’s entertainment but Hugo put paid to that. Channelling the likes of Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s City Of Lost Children (okay, with a little less weridness but a similar aesthetic), Scorsese’s tale of a young boy who lives in the walls of a gargantuan and utterly stunning French train station is about as far away as you can get from Travis “You talkin’ to me?” Bickle and the other ne’er do wells who pepper the master’s back catalogue. Perhaps as a result of that, the film went a lot further under the radar than a lot of Scorsese’s output but Hugo is definitely one to seek out.

    The Nice Guys – out on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital HD from September 26th