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JohnBrancato Tagged Articles at Cinematical

Vin Diesel Returns to the World of 'xXx' Movies

Filed under: Action », Sony », Remakes and Sequels »

Monika mentioned it a few months back, but we now have a lot more details regarding the highly-anticipated xXx: The Return of Xander Cage. And when I say "highly-anticipated," I mean anticipated by folks like Vin Diesel, director Rob Cohen, and the screenwriting team of Michael Ferris and John Brancato. Because they're getting paid.

According to Variety, the writers are the newest employees on the project, and if you're a fan of their work if you're a fan of The Net, The Game, Catwoman, Primeval, or Terminator 3. (They also have T4 on the way.) Diesel and Cohen (who recently directed the nigh-unwatchable Mummy 3) worked together on the first xXx flick, and we all remember how awesome profitable that movie was. The sequel (xXx: State of the Union) went with director Lee Tamahori and leading man Ice Cube -- and we all remember how that turned out. Actually, do we remember anything about these movies, really? One of them had an avalanche, I think.

For more on mindless action franchises that Diesel once bailed on, only to return a bit later, I refer you to this article.

Sylvester Stallone Talks 'Death Wish'

Filed under: Action », Drama », Fandom », Comic/Superhero/Geek »

I recently attended a press junket for Sylvester Stallone's amazingly violent new Rambo (in theaters January 25th). There, he was asked about his plans to remake the 1974 Charles Bronson classic Death Wish. Peter told you a bit about the new Death Wish in November, when Variety announced that Stallone would direct and star. The film will be scripted by Michael Ferris and John D. Brancato (The Net, The Game, T3: Rise of the Machines). Stallone says he thinks Death Wish, done today "would be volcanic." And despite the lack of success for recent revenge thrillers like Death Sentence and The Brave One, I think he might be right. Below is what Stallone had to say about his take on the material:

The idea in the original of Jeff Goldblum as a mugger who breaks into an apartment seems very simplistic. It gives you an idea of how bad the elevation of violence has become. I want to focus on defense attorneys, on the people who are really allowing this crap to happen. Not so much the guy out in the street, but who permits it? What if it happened to you? What if your daughter down the hall was grabbed and her eyes were put out, would you want to defend that guy? There's moral questions here that are being presented that have not been asked in 30 years. So it's not the pacifist. This fella I see, and I'm giving you a little hint here, he was a very violent human being. An ex-convict who walked the walk, was accepted back into society, did everything he could to be clean. When the incident happens, he reverts back, and it's like "My God." Now you've unleashed a man who really understands the world of violence. He isn't burdened with this passive-aggressive conscientious objector thing that's been done. It's really what happens when the wolf in sheep's clothing goes back to the wolf.

What do you think? Does Stallone's Death Wish sound like something you Wish you could see?

Bruce Willis to Star in 'The Surrogates'

Filed under: Sci-Fi & Fantasy », Casting », Newsstand »

He was supposed to head up Oliver Stone's latest Vietnam drama, Pinkville -- but that is on indefinite hold due to the strike. So, instead of some really depressing accounts of war, Bruce Willis is going sci-fi. Variety reports that the actor has signed on to star in The Surrogates -- Jonathan Mostow's robot production that Erik Davis blogged about back in March. The team that collaborated with the director on T3, Michael Ferris and John Brancato, wrote the script, which is based on a graphic novel from Robert Venditti.

Similar to the game Second Life, Surrogates is set in the near future, where humans live in isolation and interact through surrogate robots who are "better-looking versions" of themselves, rather than making the effort to step out of doors themselves. (A comment on the electronic age? Undoubtedly.) Bruce will play a cop, big surprise, who uses his surrogate to investigate the murders of other surrogates. (Wouldn't that be robotocide?) As the mystery unfolds, he has to do the unthinkable -- leave his house for the first time in years to solve the crime. While I don't go gaga for Willis, he's an attractive man, so I can't wait to see these "better-looking" robotic versions. Will good-looking celebs play sequestered humans who then play with even better-looking robots? This could get tricky really fast. The film will get released through Touchstone, and will gear up to shoot in early 2008.
 
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