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burialoftherats

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Messages posté(e)s par burialoftherats

  1. Revu hier ce film que j'avais trouve sympa mais vide a l'epoque.

    Et c'est toujours pareil.

    Il y a plein de scenes cultes (Vinnie Jones, le combat final, ...) mais entre elles, ca raconte rien de rien (a quoi servent les scènes avec les 3 voleurs), impossible pour moi de m'attacher a ce que je vois.

    Et effectivement, il y a quand meme beaucoup beaucoup de pompages sur Tarantino (meme dans la maniere de filmer).

    Le making of est sympa

    bZCAev8RSq8

    A dans 20 ans...

  2. De memoires, le film a eu de gros problemes (visibles) de prod, et le fait d'integrer des vieilles scenes coupees etait la solution pour monter a 90min (un peu comme le Sleepaway camp 4, qui dure 1h, faute de moyens).

    Mais je raconte peut etre nimp.

    wiki (putain Avary a signe un scenar non retenu):

    Canadian filmmaker Roger Avary, a self-professed hardcore fan of the Phantasm series, wrote an epic screenplay titled "Phantasm 1999 A.D." as a sequel to Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead.[1] It was set in a post-apocalyptic near future and would feature Bruce Campbell as a co-star. As the project ran into financing difficulties, Don Coscarelli wrote and directed this fourth installment as a precursor to the project,[1] using numerous outtakes from the preceding films. Avary also appeared in the film as one of the Civil War soldiers. Despite these efforts, the budget for the sequel, now retitled Phantasm's End, could not be secured.

     

    Oblivion's budget was considerably lower than the previous two Phantasm films. While Phantasm II had a budget of $3,000,000 and Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead had a budget of $2,500,000, the filmmakers were only able to secure $650,000 to make Phantasm IV: Oblivion. The filmmakers had to be inventive with the budget, much like the first film, which had only $300,000 budget. For the Civil War dream sequence a Civil War reenactment group was hired in exchange for a $200 donation. Because the production could afford to build only a few sets, several key scenes were filmed in the desert, making this the only Phantasm movie without significant scenes inside a mausoleum setting, except the very beginning and toward the end. The swarm of spheres was done by several fans of Phantasm, who then showed it to Bannister who, in turn, showed it to Coscarelli. KNB EFX group also helped out a bit on the film as a favor to Coscarelli.

     

    Rumors of a sequel were reignited in June 2007 by footage contained in Don Coscarelli's Farewell to The Alamo Drafthouse, featuring Angus Scrimm and A. Michael Baldwin in their roles. However, in an interview with Reggie Bannister that surfaced on YouTube, Bannister stated there was no activity or development involving a fifth installment but that anything was possible in the future.[2]

  3. Comme la majorité ici, une bonne claque surtout visuelle et atmosphérique.

    Le passage des ruines eclairees uniquement avec le passage d'une fusée m'a rappelle la définition du mot CINEMA.

    C'est putain de beau (meme si le heros a une tete de consanguin)

  4. Bon je savais pas ou le mettre...

    J'ai participe au pilote d'une nouvelle série de videos par Esquire Japan.

    C'est une interview exclusive du Créateur de Persona, pour la sortie de Persona 5

    Pour le pilote, on a fait 3 parties.

    La formule changera peut être, mais voila, je file les liens (avec sous titre anglais) :

    e48eTomNnIc

     

    Update : les 2 autres vidéos arriveront bientot.

  5. Vu hier soir, déjà oublie.

    A part la ultra mimi Ana la bonniche, c'est tiède, long et surtout tiede

    Franchement on s'en fout de qui a tue le vioc des les début, ça aide pas trop...

    Et Michael Shannon, j'en peu plus de son jeu d'acteur "inteeeeennsssseeee" (ici intense intériorisé)

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