I agree with you, Keith.

Now we have to convince the money men of that...

"If all the world's a stage and all the people merely players, who in bloody 
hell hired the director?" -- Charles L Grant

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik




To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
From: keithbjohn...@comcast.net
Date: Thu, 3 Sep 2009 04:22:36 +0000
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] From the "Please let them be wrong!" Category















 




    
                  
I'd choose neither option. How about Smith does something else aside from 
either of these sequels?
As for Bay, it didn't take Transformers for me to dislike him. I've always felt 
he was a hack who uses the lowest common denominator of noise, explosions, 
chases, and bad camera work to hype up the action. John Woo he's not....

----- Original Message -----
From: "Daryle Lockhart" <dar...@darylelockhart.com>
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, September 2, 2009 10:05:40 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] From the "Please let them be wrong!" Category







 




    
                  
This project has a 50% chance of being a lot of fun. That 50% hinges on whether 
or not Michael Bay decides not to  do it. Michael Bay is waaaay to disconnected 
to do an enjoyable cop-based action movie. This Transformers stuff has just 
taken him to another  place, and I don't think any of us want to  go there with 
 him. Anymore.

There are a few directors,  Carl Franklin being  one,  who I would like to  see 
take on this story and make it into something.  Make it  grow.
Will Smith is the biggest movie star in the world. He is either going to  do 
this...or Men In Black 3.  It's GOING to happen. Which  would you rather?







On Sep 2, 2009, at 8:37 AM, Martin Baxter wrote:         Deity, why hast thou 
forsaken us?

"If all the world's a stage and all the people merely players, who in bloody 
hell hired the director?" -- Charles L Grant

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik





To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
From: keithbjohn...@comcast.net
Date: Wed, 2 Sep 2009 03:45:35 +0000
Subject: [scifinoir2] From the "Please let them be wrong!" Category

                           
You have got to be kidding! I almost walked out of the second "Bad Boys", so 
bad it was with crappy writing, unfunny jokes, over-the-top-but-unmoving noise 
and explosions. I thought it was the ultimate exercise in bad Hollywood movie 
making: a film that was louder, more violent, more full of car stuff, 
more--more-- than anything out at the time. Instead it just made me feel 
numbed. The worst mix of Smith and Lawrence telling lame jokes (I was offended 
at the comments made at female corpses' breast), Bay at his directing worse. 
Even managed to waste Gabriel Union (her chase scene in that van actually had 
me and my wife laughing).

And we're recently talking about the fear that Hollywood will go even further 
down the path of abandoning high concept films, good dramas, and original 
properties in favor of endless sequels, comic-to-movie adaptations, and low 
budget, high profit comedies and horror flicks.  We hear that only the likes of 
Smith will continue to get big salaries. I was even watching Leonardo Di Caprio 
on Charlie Rose recently saying how it was getting harder to make a good drama 
unless it had a lot of action and appealed to key demographics.

This is a key example of that unfortunate trend.

I will *not* be in the seats for this one, if the rumours prove to be true.

***********************************************************
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3if39271c89709c28eceb20163c74fc6f4

'Bad Boys 3' in the works Peter Craig will write the screenplayBy Borys KitAug 
30, 2009, 11:00 PM ET    Columbia Pictures is developing a third installment of 
the high-octane "Bad Boys" franchise, tapping Peter Craig to pen the screenplay.
 
The hope is to have a script that would reunite director Michael Bay, producer 
Jerry Bruckheimer and stars Will Smith and Martin Lawrence. At this point, with 
the project in the early stages, none has a deal to return.
 
The "Boys" movies feature Smith and Lawrence as Miami detectives Mike Lowrey 
and Marcus Burnett, caught up in cases involving car chases and explosions. 
 
The first "Boys," released in 1995, helped launch Bay as a director and Smith 
as an action star even though it was not a fire-stamped blockbuster -- it 
grossed $66 million domestically and $141 million worldwide. 
 
The sequel, released in 2003 when Bay and Smith's stars had risen, grossed $138 
million domestically and $273 million worldwide. 
 
All parties have expressed a willingness to return if a story can be hammered 
out. One potential hurdle, however, would be the costly deals with the players.
 
Craig, repped by CAA and Management 360, co-wrote "The Town," which Ben Affleck 
is directing for Warner Bros. and which shoots in Boston next month. He is 
adapting anime "Cowboy Bebop" for 20th Century Fox and Keanu Reeves.  

                                                                        
Get back to school stuff for them and cashback for you. Try Bing now.           
                         


 

      

    
    
        
        




        
        

 

      

    
    
        
        
        
        


        


        
        
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