Tag Archive | "Runaways"

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Is GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY Marvel’s Second 2014 Film?

Posted on 28 June 2012 by William Gatevackes

In this digital age, journalists no longer have to work in the same office. Heck, FBOL Editor-in-Chief Rich Drees and I don’t even live in the same state. Odds are the staff of Latino Review has a similar arrangement. However, they should probably schedule a conference call or keep in touch better through e-mail or something.

Why? Because way back on June 5, just over three weeks ago, Latino Review writer El Mayimbe swore that The Black Panther would be the film in the remaining 2014 spot held by Marvel. He claimed he heard it from four sources! We duly relayed the news here.

However, today Latino Review writer Da7e states that no, the 2014 film will instead be Guardians of the Galaxy. Sheesh! Make up your mind!

While El Mayimbe is the only one of the two listed as a contributor and, well, had four sources, I’m leaning towards Da7e with this one. Here’s why:

  1. Marvel has been buying up any domain name having to do with the Guardians of the Galaxy over the last several weeks.
  2. In the Marvel Comic book Avengers Assemble, a comic introduced when The Avengers film was still in theaters, with a cast of characters that mirrored the cast of characters in the film, which also featured Thanos as a bad guy, the Guardians of the Galaxy have just made an appearance. The team making an appearance in a book that was custom designed to appeal to new readers who loved the movie can’t be a coincidence.
  3. Avengers Assemble writer Brian Michael Bendis, arguably Marvel’s biggest superstar when it comes to writing, is rumored to be writing a new Guardians of the Galaxy series some time in the near future.
  4. As we reported here, Kevin Feige was asked which Marvel property in development–Inhumans, Ant-Man, Runaways or Guardians of the Galaxy–would Marvel be bringing to theaters the soonest. Feige cryptically answered that two of them were closer to the big screen that anyone thinks. Note Black Panther was nowhere on that list.
  5. The version of the Guardians pictured above, the most recent incarnation of the team and the ones guest starring in Avengers Assemble, are a space-faring force that specializes in staring down universe threatening bad guys, which would fit perfectly in with building up Thanos as the bad guy in Avengers 2.

So, which one is it? Well, we’ll find out in three weeks when the San Diego Comic Con kicks off.

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Marvel Studios’ Kevin Feige Teases Upcoming Mystery Projects

Posted on 14 May 2012 by Rich Drees

When you put out a product that makes over a billion dollars in about two week, the folks at Bloomberg would like to talk to you. And although he doesn’t really hint at anything new, this clip from the financial news outlet with Marvel Studios honcho Kevin Feige has been making the online rounds today.

In it, he once again talks about the studio’s post-Avengers plans which in the past he has referred to as “Phase Two.” (And I am now wondering if that was a tongue-in-cheek reference to a subplot point in The Avengers before anyone outside of the production knew about it.)

We want to do two films a year. Avengers is our only film this year, but in a week and a half we begin filming Iron Man 3. By the end of the summer we’ll be working on the next Thor film, early next year the next Captain America film. Those are the three we’ve announced so far; we’ve got two beyond that that we haven’t announced yet, but we’re working on.

We know that one of those mystery films will be Marvel’s second film for 2014. Presumably the second mystery definite film is scheduled for 2015. (You can see the complete video of the interview below.)

But what could they be? We know that that they have been developing a number of properties including an Ant-Man film with Edgar Wright that is reportedly close to being ready to go. The studio has also been developing projects around characters such as Dr. Strange, Black Panther, Iron Man, the Runaways and the Guardians of the Galaxy. Additionally, there has been talk of a possible SHIELD film or even a new attempt at a Hulk movie given the positive notices that Mark Ruffalo has received for his performance in The Avengers. And of course there is the inevitable Avengers sequel.

So when will we hear about these two mystery films? Since they weren’t mentioned in the recently released Walt Disney Company quarterly earnings report, I would suspect that the next logical time and place for the announcement will be this July at the San Diego Comic-Con.

 

In the mean time, Iron Man 3 premier on May 3, 2013, Thor 2 on November 15, 2013, Captain America 2 on April 4, 2014 and the first of Marvel’s two mystery projects will hit theaters on May 16, 2014.

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Feige: Ruffalo Whedon’s Choice, Button Scene Hints, And Other Tidbits From The CBR Interview

Posted on 17 April 2012 by William Gatevackes

You have to love Kevin Feige. He has provided enough talking points in a recent article on Comic Book Resources to fill fifteen blog posts. I’ll try my best to squeeze them all into this one.

The comments come from a one-on-one interview with CBR News’ Josie Campbell as part of the promotional blitz leading up to May 4th’s The Avengers release. That film was a main talking point, but Feige also touched on Marvel Studios’ past and future.

Let’s start with the now-expected post-credits button scene. Feige explained what that scene will contain:

There’s a reveal at the end — the notion that Loki has made an arrangement with somebody, that somebody has provided these extremely deadly and creepy and cool aliens to fight alongside him and then to reveal who that somebody was, that’s all Joss and that was sort of the big payoff

So, who could the the big baddie of the button scene be? This modus operandi sort of fits Thanos, the cosmic Marvel Comics bad guy that has been long rumored to be included in the film. However, the fact that Joss Whedon appears to be the one who came up with the bad guy could lend credence to the rumor that the villain would be Ord from Whedon’s run on the Astonishing X-Men comic book. Personally, I think it will be the former rather than the latter, if only because Thanos would have more of a wow factor for the comic book fans in the audience.

Feige also touches on the casting of Mark Ruffalo as Bruce Banner. If you recall, the recasting of the character caused a bit of controversy back in July of 2010 as Edward Norton was removed from the role, which cause a flurry of statements from Marvel, Norton’s agent, and Norton himself over the brouhaha, before it was announced that Ruffalo signed on. Well, if Norton’s fans were looking for a black hat in all of this, Feige gave them one–Joss Whedon.

There had been discussion as to where to take that character and where to take the part and Joss had some ideas; he came to us and said, ‘I’d like to think about another actor,’ and we said, ‘Well, much of what we like about ‘The Avengers’ is we’re taking all the actors we had before and putting them together again, so we said it depends on who you’re thinking of — if you’re thinking of A, B or C maybe not, if you’re thinking of Mark Ruffalo we’d be open to a conversation. And he goes, ‘Holy shit!’ and takes a list out of his pocket, and at the top of his list was Mark Ruffalo! We had said that because Mark had come very, very close to playing Banner in ‘The Incredible Hulk,’ which Joss had no idea, we never talked about it before. It was one of those moments when you’re so deeply on the same page without even realizing it.”

It’s pretty clear from this quote that jettisoning Norton was Whedon’s idea. Feige doesn’t give a reason, but presents Marvel Studios as being okay with the decision as long as Whedon didn’t go too far off the reservation. It also goes to show how popular Mark Ruffalo is within this realm of Hollywood.

Feige also gave us a little insight into the creative process of how the studios worked with Whedon to keep The Avengers in line with the rest of the Marvel films:

We told him what characters we wanted, we told him how we wanted S.H.I.E.L.D. to be sort of the umbrella organization that tied it all together, we wanted the Helicarrier and we wanted Loki to be the bad guy and sort of that final, final battle in New York. All of the specifics, all of the dialogue, all of the humor and the emotional states of the characters and the interconnected way the characters relate to each other is from the books, from the other movies and from Joss.

For something completely unrelated yet something that caught my eye was Feige’s comment on the differences between the Marvel film adaptations and the DC film adaptations:

I haven’t seen ‘Dark Knight Rises.’ [Christopher] Nolan’s tone is very specific and is pretty awesome and we’re very different. I think that while we have, particularly in ‘Avengers,’ very serious moments and [it] is as dark and serious as the moments in any of our films, there’s a sense of humor that goes along with it that Joss is an expert at and that we believe very strongly that Jon Favreau really helped define in the ‘Iron Man’ films, that allows, we believe, the audience to get in even deeper into the story. There’s a lot of crazy stuff going on in our movies and we want people to believe in them and we want people to relate to them. When they’re laughing, when they’re cheering, you can suddenly hit them with something else — you open up through humor and that tone, that fine line between the epic, the bombastic, the moving and the humor is to me that favorite part of stringing all these movies together.

I find this to be either a savvy piece of marketing or a subtle dig at the DC film slate (or possibly both). This comes on the news reports that the new Superman film, Man of Steel, will be “edgier,” confirming that Warner Brothers’ film group President Jeff Robinov wasn’t joking when he said again and again that DC films would be better if they were as dark and gritty as The Dark Knight.  I always thought that Robinov’s belief that every DC character would benefit from a darker tone was asinine at worst and ill conceived at best, but with this statement, Feige is saying two things. One, we have no problem getting people to see lighter superhero fare and, two, if you want an alternative to the darker, less kid-friendly DC films, bring them over here! Either way, it’s a genius statement.

Feige also hinted at the future of the Marvel film universe, stating that Iron Man 3 will “redefine” the franchise:

‘Iron Man 3′ being the next one up is a very different film than the others. I am a big fan of continuing to redefine what a Marvel movie is, what a comic book movie is; I think we did that with ‘Iron Man,’ we did that with ‘Thor,’ we did that with ‘Cap’ and Joss [Whedon] has helped us doing it now on ‘Avengers.’ Shane Black is helping us do it on ‘Iron Man 3.’

I get the feeling that many people consider Iron Man 2 to be a disappointment.  I don’t, so I really don’t think that it needs redefining. However, I do appreciate the fact that they are tweaking the concept in franchise instead of doing a reboot, which seems so common these days.

And, when asked which of the four most talked about forthcoming Marvel franchises–Guardians of the Galaxy, Ant-Man, Runaways, and Inhumans–would be the next to come down the pipeline, Feige offered this cryptic statement.

Two of those four are much closer than people realize, and we’ll be talking about them in the coming months!

Go ahead. Place you bets as to what two he’s talking about. I’ll dare ya. You can pick just about any two from the list and have justification in guessing those particular films. tell you what, here’s my choices–Ant-Man and Guardians of the Galaxy. My reasoning: if they will be talking about them in the coming months, they will probably have something to do with The Avengers. Ant-Man is an Avenger in the comic books, and of the four it seems like the one furthest along in the production cycle. And if you are going to introduce a cosmic, intergalactic villain in the final frames of your big summer blockbuster, wouldn’t you want audiences to see them again in the near future? And what better concept to showcase a threat to the Galaxy than in a film centered on the Guardians of the Galaxy?

There’s a lot of other good stuff in the interview. I recommend everyone to check it out.

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Marvel’s RUNAWAYS Begins Casting

Posted on 01 October 2010 by Rich Drees

It appears that Marvel Studios has begun casting its next comic book adaptation, Runaways.

Teen actress and singer Keke Palmer has told Essence magazine -

I’ve had a nice little break with the steady TV show but I’m definitely ready to do some more films again. I was just asked to join a new Marvel comic project called, Runaways.

Palmler is probably best known to movie audiences for her roll in the spelling bee drama Akeelah and the Bee, though she has had success with the Disney Channel series True Jackson, VP.

It is unclear as to what role she has been offered though, as while there are numerous female characters in the series, none of them are African-American. Is Marvel playing fast and loose with the ethnicity of the characters in their casting process? If they are, it doesn’t bother me all that much, and that’s speaking as a fan of the series. The Runaways cast has always been a fairly diverse one, so if they change things around a bit, I think I can live with it.

Runaways was created by writer Brian K Vaughn and artist Adrian Alphona as a superhero spin on the idea of teen rebellion. The series focuses on a group of teenagers who discover that their parents are a supervillain cabal known as The Pride and that they have their own powers they can use to stop them. Vaughn took a pass at a screenplay for the project in 2008. In addition to his acclaimed comics work with his original series Y: The Last Man and the recently concluded Ex Machina, both of which are currently in feature film development, Vaughn has served as a writer/producer for seasons four and five of Lost.

Peter Sollett is directing from a script by British screenwriter Drew Pearce. Production is expected to get underway in the spring.

Via SlashFilm.

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RUNAWAYS Comic Adaptation Shooting Next March

Posted on 02 September 2010 by Rich Drees

Marvel Studios is ramping up pre-production on its adaptation of the teenagers-with-super powers comics series The Runaways, with cameras set to roll next March.

This marks the first concrete revelation of Marvel’s plans after the release of The Avengers in 2012. Marvel also has several other post-Avengers projects in development, including Ant-Man, Iron Fist, a potential third Iron Man film and possible spinoff films for any character that has already appeared or will be appearing in any current or upcoming film. Additionally, there are plenty of other rumored adaptations of comics like Black Panther and Dr. Strange that the studio has not commented on officially.

Production Weekly has reported via their tweeter feed that the film will be shooting in Los Angeles under the fake title Small Faces.

(And for those of you not up on your classic 1960s and 70s rock, Slash Film reminds us that Small Faces is the British band that had a hit with the song – ready for it? – “Runaways.”)

Sitting the director’s chair for the film will be Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist helmer Peter Sollett, working from a script currently being finalized by British screenwriter Drew Pearce, who created the superheroes-in-their-off hours comedy series No Heroics for the BBC.Casting is currently underway.

The comics series was created by writer Brian K Vaughn and artist Adrian Alphona. A superhero spin on the idea of teen rebellion, the series focuses on a group of teenagers who discover that their parents are a supervillain cabal known as The Pride and that they have their own powers they can use to stop them. Vaughn took a pass at a screenplay for the project in 2008. In addition to his acclaimed comics work with his original series Y: The Last Man and the recently concluded Ex Machina, both of which are currently in feature film development, Vaughn has served as a writer/producer for seasons four and five of Lost.

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Marvel Planning Slate For Third-Tier Characters

Posted on 22 April 2010 by Rich Drees

With their slate of comic-book adaptations set through 2012 with blockbusters Iron Man 2, Thor, Captain America and The Avengers, Marvel Studios is looking to diversify the size of their films beyond that.

CHUD is reporting that Marvel has been quietly meeting with writers and directors recently about developing films based around some of Marvel Comics’ third-string characters.

Filmmakers are being offered their pick of characters whose names are only familiar to comic fans. Properties like Dr. Strange, Ka-Zar, Luke Cage, Dazzler and Power Pack are among the many that are being tossed around right now. And the attitude seems to be that Marvel is open to bringing any of their characters to the screen at the right price point.

Business-wise, this makes good sense for the studio. While I have been excited by their plans to have their current super hero films interweave their continuity to pave the way for the team-up film The Avengers. But it is also a risky proposition. If one were to spectacularly fail at the box-office, it could jeopardize the remaining films on their schedule. Peppering their production schedule with smaller films spreads the financial risk around a bit, letting the studio’s fortunes not rest each film released. In fact, a number of smaller, $20-$30 million films would probably be more consistent money-makers for the studio than one or two blockbusters budgeted at over $100 million each. A smaller budgeted film could also take some more creative risks, as not as much would be resting on its shoulders financially, if it doesn’t pay off.

This would also allow the studio to start building a stable of talent that could conceivably graduate from one of their smaller films to one of their bigger pictures. Marvel could use the films as a way of “auditioning” talent that they are interested in working with.

It is also a win for Marvel Comics fans, as it increases the chances that some of their favorite characters who don’t have a large recognition factor outside of comics of making it to the big screen.

Currently, we know that Marvel is actively developing at least two films beyond The Avengers.

Ant-Man, based on their size-changing, has a script written by writer/director Edgar Wright but no start date has been announced. Wright is also busy developing The World’s End, his third collaboration with Shaun Of The Dead and Hot Fuzz stars Simon Pegg and Nick Frost, which could factor in to when Ant-Man gets in front of the cameras.

Marvel has also recently tapped Nick And Nora’s Infinite Playlist director Peter Sollett to helm Runaways, based on Marvel Comics’ series about a group of teens and pre-teens who discover that their parents are a cabal of Super-villains. Series creator Brian K. Vaughn is reportedly at work on a screenplay.

Marvel Studios President of Production Kevin Feige has already stated back in 2008 that the studio was looking to develop a Dr. Strange film, so I expect that that character will definitely show up at some time after the 2012 release of The Avengers. As to who else will be making the jump to from the comics page to the big screen, we’ll just have to wait and see.

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Whedon Assembling AVENGERS

Posted on 13 April 2010 by William Gatevackes

If this happens, it could make a lot of people really happy and have a lot of people complaining.

Deadline New York, the East Coast version of Deadline Hollywood gossip blog, is reporting that Joss Whedon is in “final negotiations” to direct the big screen adaptation of The Avengers comic book.

The film version is the ipso facto sequel to all of Marvel’s films from the last two years and the ones yet to come before The Avengers’ May 4, 2012 release date. Many of the stars of Marvel’s slate of films, including Robert Downey Jr. and Chris Evans, are rumored to have signed on to reprise their roles in the team-up film.

Whedon has a relationship with Marvel as a comic book writer, yet not on any of the Avengers‘  titles. He has written Astonishing X-Men and Runaways for the comic book company. Plots from his X-men comic book made it into X-Men: The Last Stand and he did an uncredited rewrite on the first X-Men film.

His past experience on such genre-friendly TV shows such as Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Firefly and Dollhouse show his ability to juggle many interesting characters and be able to give them moments to shine. But this is usually chalked up to his writing ability, not his skill as a director. Also, those last two projects were cult hits yet ratings failures and his only film directing experience, the 2005 Firefly spin-off, Serenity, was a box office bomb. So while his legion of fans might be giddy with excitement, there is cause for concern.

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