Go to Blogger edit html and find these sentences.Now replace these sentences with your own descriptions.This theme is Bloggerized by Lasantha Bandara - Premiumbloggertemplates.com.
In the first trailer for the reboot of National Lampoon's Vacation, it's clear that Rusty Griswold (Ed Helms) approaches family road trips with the same blind optimism as his father Clark (Chevy Chase) did in the original movie.
How much should a film that is effectively a hybrid reboot and sequel of another reference the original? If you’re the team behind the new Vacation, the answer is apparently, “a whole load, but also get meta with it.” So here’s the first trailer for the new comedy, full of Red Band material.
Vacation finds Ed Helms inheriting the role of Rusty Griswold from 1983’s National Lampoon’s Vacation. Now grown, married and with a family of his own, he’s worried that his kids are stagnating. So Rusty decides to pack James (Skyler Gisondo), Kevin (Steele Stebbins) and wife Debbie (Christina Applegate) on a cross-country trip to Walley World, the theme park his own father tried to reach years before.
And what would a Vacation movie be without that very father, as Rusty stops in to visit Clark (Chevy Chase) and Ellen Griswold (Beverly D’Angelo) on their way, along with a drop-in on Rusty’s sister Audrey (Leslie Mann) and her hubby, Stone Crandall (Chris Hemsworth).
The tone here seems to be winking fealty to the original with a dash of millennial uncertainty about what it actually was, and a helping of jokes about bodily functions. Oh, and the expected use of Chris Hemsworth’s natural advantages along with his comic timing, which is no surprise to anyone who has seen either Avengers movie (“…he’s adopted.”)
With Keegan-Michael Key, Nick Kroll, Charlie Day, Regina Hall and Kaitlin Olsen in the cast, the new Vacation comes from writers-turned-directors John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein. It’ll visit our cinemas on November 13.
How much should a film that is effectively a hybrid reboot and sequel of another reference the original? If you’re the team behind the new Vacation, the answer is apparently, “a whole load, but also get meta with it.” So here’s the first trailer for the new comedy.
Vacation finds Ed Helms inheriting the role of Rusty Griswold from 1983’s National Lampoon’s Vacation. Now grown, married and with a family of his own, he’s worried that his kids are stagnating. So Rusty decides to pack James (Skyler Gisondo), Kevin (Steele Stebbins) and wife Debbie (Christina Applegate) on a cross-country trip to Walley World, the theme park his own father tried to reach years before.
And what would a Vacation movie be without that very father, as Rusty stops in to visit Clark (Chevy Chase) and Ellen Griswold (Beverly D’Angelo) on their way, along with a drop-in on Rusty’s sister Audrey (Leslie Mann) and her hubby, Stone Crandall (Chris Hemsworth).
The tone here seems to be winking fealty to the original with a dash of millennial uncertainty about what it actually was, and a helping of jokes about bodily functions. Oh, and the expected use of Chris Hemsworth’s natural advantages along with his comic timing, which is no surprise to anyone who has seen either Avengers movie (“…he’s adopted.”)
With Keegan-Michael Key, Nick Kroll, Charlie Day, Regina Hall and Kaitlin Olsen in the cast, the new Vacation comes from writers-turned-directors John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein. It’ll visit our cinemas on November 13.
If you saw the trailer for The Death Of Superman Lives: What Happened?, the fascinating documentary about Tim Burton and Nic Cage’s dashed hopes to bring the superhero to life back in the 1990s, you might be itching to see more. We’ve got some exclusive images from the doc in a gallery lower down the page and a new clip of Burton talking up the original reaction to him casting Cage.
Filmmaker Jon Schnepp wrangled together many of the key talent involved in the attempt to bring a Burton’s vision for Superman to life, including producer Jon Peters, writers Dan Gilroy, Wesley Strick and Kevin Smith, plus those who worked on costume and effects development. The film itself may never have seen the light of day, brought low by creative wrangling and studio pressure, but we do at least have footage of Cage trying on different suits and looks at some of the props and other designs for it. {The Death Of Superman Lives What Happened?}
And what if you want to go and see the movie yourself before it hits VOD in July? UK audiences are in luck, as it’ll be screened on May 22 and 23 at MCM Comic Con at ExCel London. You can grab tickets for the event here.