Quickhits: Downloading Kong, Bob the Musical, A Director for Watchmen?
Filed under: Drama, Music & Musicals, Romance, Deals, Universal, Warner Brothers, Tech Stuff, Distribution, Newsstand, Home Entertainment, Comic/Superhero/Geek
- According to a from-the-horse's-mouth report at AICN, 300 director Zack Snyder is in talks to direct the long-simmering Watchmen movie. Of course, since both Darren Aronofsky and Paul Greengrass had and then lost the job, the name of a director doesn't necessarily mean much in this case. That said, however, at least they're talking - after years of waiting, maybe the movie will actually get done.
- Stepping bravely away from the screen-adaptation-of-an-established-show trend that is the key to movie musicals these days, Touchstone Pictures is working on Bob: The Musical, a musical comedy about "a mild-mannered man who suddenly hears the 'inner song' of people's hearts after being struck in the head." Awesome. The screenplay is currently being rewritten by John August, Tony-winner and five-time Oscar nominee Marc Shaiman is penning the lyrics and score, and Mark Waters (he of Freaky Friday and Mean Girls fame - I wonder if his contract requires the presence of at least one Lohan at all times) is set to direct.
- Universal will kick off their new, UK-only download-to-own
program with the release of King
Kong next week. When the film comes out on DVD, it will also be made available over the internet and, for the
small fee of £19.99, buyers will not only be able to download 2 copies of the movie (one that can be legally
transfered to another video player, and one that has to stay on the hard drive), but will also get a DVD of the film in
the mail. If the program works (read: makes lots of money), Universal plans to make about 30 other new releases
available for download. I'm unclear on why anyone would bother to do this - it'll be interesting to see how many people
choose the downloading option, and how Universal spins the numbers to make them sounds positive.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
3-26-2006 @ 5:43PM
Martin Malloy said...
I doesn't seem like you’re impressed with the idea of downloadable movies. I think it’s just the start of things to come.
We are at a time where HTPC presence is dramatically increasing and patience is decreasing. Digital downloads solve this problem.
This is what geeks have been wanting for years, but I think that may be the problem. Only fellow geeks care about this. The average person probably just wants a movie they can put in and play.
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