Best “TV” Movie Posters of 2018

IMP Awards is running a survey for their readers choose their favorite teaser “TV” movie posters for 2018. My vote would go to Cargo. Was I wrong?
Previews and Reviews that are Z's Views

IMP Awards is running a survey for their readers choose their favorite teaser “TV” movie posters for 2018. My vote would go to Cargo. Was I wrong?

Once a week Joblo.com posts Awesome Art We’ve Found Around the Net.
I always enjoy seeing what JoBlo has found because with each post they list the artist’s name and a link to more of his/her art. That’s where I saw this Rambo poster by Kyle Frink. Click on the pic above to see a bigger version.
What we’re looking at above is extremely rare concept paintings for Bram Stoker’s Dracula by Jim Steranko. I’d love to see a book of Steranko’s movie concept art (Dracula, Raiders, etc.), but then again, who wouldn’t?
Click on the photo above to see a larger version.
Source: Cool Comic Art
Steranko on Twitter: @iamsteranko

When John Carpenter and Kurt Russell developed the character of Snake Plissken for Escape from New York, they knew they had a winning character. Russell enjoyed playing Snake, Carpenter had plans for many future adventures, and most importantly fans loved Snake Plissken.
Snake (Kurt and Carpenter) returned for Escape from LA. Although not as well-received as EFNY, Escape from LA was not going to be the final adventure for our one-eyed anti-hero. Next up was to be Escape from Earth. Sadly, that film never left the launching pad.
But Snake Plissken didn’t fade away. There were plans for future films, a tv series, comics (that did happen) and video games. Kieran Fisher at Film School Rejects discusses them all in his article The Snake Plissken Sequels We’ll Never Get to See. Since you’ve read this far, my guess is you’ll enjoy it.

The Mind of Donald E. Westlake by Levi Stahl takes a look at Westlake’s ventures into screenwriting and the adaptations of his work for movies and television. It’s worth a look.
Did you know Westlake wrote a screenplay adapting Hammet’s Red Harvest? Sadly it was never made. Neither was Westlake’s James Bond screenplay. It’s no secret that Lee Marvin played Westlake’s most popular character Parker on the big screen, but did you know…
…that Between Point Blank, in 1967, and Parker, in 2013, Parker (usually under other names) was played by Lee Marvin, Robert Duvall, Jim Brown, Mel Gibson, Jason Statham, and, strangest of all, Anna Karina…
I didn’t.

Max Evry and ComingSoon present 18 Things We Learned from the New Waterworld Blu-Ray. Here are three of my favorites…
Jack Black is in this movie.
In one of his earliest film roles, comedy superstar Jack Black portrayed the soot-faced Smoker airplane pilot who attacks The Mariner only to get his plane caught on the trimarand’s mast. He’s only in a few scene and is barely recognizable due to the heavy amount of dirt make-up he wears.
Kevin Reynolds did the big explosion stunt himself
One of the major stunts in the film is when Kevin Costner shoots down a wire using a hook as a massive explosion erupts behind him. At first production would not allow Costner to do the stunt, fearing for the actor’s life. To demonstrate that it was perfectly safe for Costner, Reynolds performed the stunt himself.
The Waterworld stunt show at Universal is still going!
Originally opening at the same time as the film in 1995, Waterworld: A Live Sea War Spectacular is a live stunt show featuring the Atollers being attacked by Smokers. It is still active to this day at Universal Studios Hollywood, Universal Studios Japan, and Universal Studios Singapore.

Brian Cronin’s When Jim Steranko Re-Cast Nick Fury and the Agents of S.H.I.E.LD. at CBR.com is well worth a read.
But before you click over, let’s have a little fun.
Cronin contends that Steranko based his version of Nick Fury on an actor famous for his athleticism and rugged good looks. After reading the article, I agree!
As a bonus, Cronin also suggests that the blonde guy with the big smile in the lower right on the cover above is another famous actor from the same time period. And, again I think that he’s right.
Do you have any ideas who those two actors could be?

The movie What We Do in the Shadows really surprised me with how funny and well done it was. It was good enough to spawn a tv series. We have a trailer for it below. I’m worried the series won’t hold up to the movie, but I am willing to give it a shot.

Above is Thomas Boatwright’s art of Sly from Rambo III. If you like what you see (or love it as I do) then you may want to check out the video below of Boatwright creating it!
Over the years I’ve gotten several Stallone pieces from Thomas. Click on the link to see what has been posted so far… there are more to come.
If you’d like to see more of Thomas Boatwright’s art check out his blog and his instagram. Send him some love.

Tim Grierson and Will Leitch at Syfy.com tried to answer the question of what were The Best Twist Endings in Movie History. They picked the following their top five:
5. Life (2017)
4. The Others (2001)
3. Planet of the Apes (1968)
2. Fight Club (1999)
1. The Sixth Sense (1999)
Their list isn’t bad but I would have included a few which didn’t make their cut. Here are my top 5:
5. Psycho (1960)
4. Primal Fear (1996)
3. Shutter Island (2010)
2. The Usual Suspects (1995)
1. Planet of the Apes (1968)

Josh Spiegel at Syfy.com ranks his choices for The 17 Best Director Cameos in Movie History. Using just Spiegel’s list here are my top three…
Roman Polanski, Chinatown (1974)
Mel Brooks, Blazing Saddles (1974)
Alfred Hitchcock, North By Northwest (1959)
…followed by 3 that didn’t make the list.
Sylvester Stallone, Staying Alive (1983)
Francis Ford Coppola, Apocalypse Now (1979)
Alfred Hitchock, Lifeboat (1944)

Padraig Cotter at ScreenRant has posted what he believes to be Everything You Need to Know About Rambo V: Last Blood.
The article does a good job of covering the film and is worth a read. Here are a couple of tidbits that stuck out to me…
The star planned to adapt the novel Hunter for Rambo V, which finds a legendary tracker being tasked by the government to track down a feral, man-made monster. Hunter leads a team of mercenaries after the creature, which seemingly cannot be killed. Since Hunter and Rambo are essentially the same character, Stallone felt the book would make a strong basis for a sequel.
When Stallone later pitched this version on Ain’t It Cool News, it was met with swift derision from fans, so he soon scrapped the concept; that said, it was recently confirmed he plans to adapt Hunter as a solo movie.
Although at first look, Rambo and Hunter are similar (and the adaptation would have been fairly easy), I was glad that the decision was made to scrap this idea. I’m even happier that Sly plans to adapt Hunter as a solo movie.
First Blood author David Morrell revealed in an interview that, around the time Stallone was working on Creed, he got in touch about working on a script that would mark a “soulful” final journey for John Rambo. The pair collaborated on this concept, which Morrell says would have contained action, but it was more about a man who had spent his life at war contemplating his past.
The author feels this undiscovered Rambo V concept could’ve garnered awards recognition, but when Stallone took it to producers, they rejected it and wanted to focus on the human trafficking story instead. It appears the star wasn’t happy with this, as Stallone later announced his retirement from both the Rambo and Expendables franchises.
Morrell is not only the creator of Rambo, but an outstanding, award-winning author. It would have been very interesting to see the direction he took Rambo. Morrell still owns the rights to publish any Rambo stories but has elected to tell other stories.
With all that said, click over and check out Everything You Need to Know About Rambo V: Last Blood.

Art fans will be glad to hear about the publication of Fuel to the Fire: The Art of Tomer Hanuka.
Discover the magical realism that makes Tomer Hanuka so popular in this exceptional art book celebrating the award-winning illustrator’s comic-inspired art. Fuel to the Fire is a massive 300-page monograph filled with illustrations and comic book art that has graced the pages of The New York Times, The New Yorker, Rolling Stone, Criterion, and more. This long-awaited monograph showcases Hanuka’s most iconic and exclusive masterpieces, including all of his famous covers for The New Yorker and his award-winning recreations of movie posters (The Graduate, Star Wars, Akira, and every Kubrick film).
I can’t wait to get a look at this baby!

Philip Pirrello has compiled a list of The 21 Best Action Movies That Still Hold Up Today. Pirello’s list contains the movies you’d expect, although we probably all would disagree on the order.
For the record, my top three films from the list would be (in alphabetical order):
Several actors made two appearances on the list: Tommy Lee Jones, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Will Smith, Wesley Snipes and Sly Stallone. Only two actors had three appearances and they may surprise you (they did me): Keanu Reeves and Harrison Ford!

Donnybrook wasn’t even on my radar until a couple of days ago. You can believe it is now. I read the novel Donnybrook by Bill Frank when it was first released and really enjoyed it.
The Donnybrook is a three-day bare-knuckle tournament held on a thousand-acre plot out in the sticks of southern Indiana. Twenty fighters. One wire-fence ring. Fight until only one man is left standing while a rowdy festival of onlookers―drunk and high on whatever’s on offer―bet on the fighters.
Jarhead is a desperate man who’d do just about anything to feed his children. He’s also the toughest fighter in southeastern Kentucky, and he’s convinced that his ticket to a better life is one last fight with a cash prize so big it’ll solve all his problems.
Meanwhile, there’s Chainsaw Angus―an undefeated master fighter who isn’t too keen on getting his face punched anymore, so he and his sister, Liz, have started cooking meth. And they get in deep. So deep that Liz wants it all for herself, and she might just be ready to kill her brother for it. One more showdown to take place at the Donnybrook.
As we travel through the backwoods to get to the Donnybrook, we meet a cast of nasty, ruined characters driven to all sorts of evil, all in the name of getting their fix―drugs, violence, sex, money, honor. Donnybrook is exactly the fearless, explosive, amphetamine-fueled journey you’d expect from Frank Bill’s first novel . . . and then some.
Here’s the trailer!