Recently in Casting Category
I've been watching the casting fly-by on this without commenting, and I still kinda wish they'd gone with Mad Men's Jon Hamm for Hal Jordan over the getting-overexposed Ryan Reynolds (who already has two other comic properties to his name in Deadpool and Blade III.) Nonetheless, Mark Strong has joined the cast of Martin Campell's Green Lantern as Sinestro, the Lantern's arch-nemesis. He joins Reynolds, Blake Lively (Carol Ferris), Peter Sarsgaard (Hector Hammond), and Tim Robbins (Sen. Hammond, Hector's pa.)
Well, that's a pretty solid cast on the villain side. But I fear this is just going to feel like an attempt to cash in on DC's second-tier (a la Iron Man on the Marvel side)...unless they go really big and space-age with it. Like Green Lantern Corps, Oans, etc.
"A decade ago we set out on this journey with Sam Raimi and Tobey Maguire and together we made three 'Spider-Man' films that set a new bar for the genre. When we began, no one ever imagined that we would make history at the box-office and now we have a rare opportunity to make history once again with this franchise."
Um, ok. Apparently as a result of continuing tensions between Sam Raimi (still gunshy after being forced to include Venom in Spiderman 3) and the studio suits (who wanted him to move ahead anyway), Sony puts the kibosh on Spiderman 4 and sends Raimi, Maguire, et al on their way. Next up is a reboot, scripted by Zodiac's James Vanderbilt and slated for 2012. (Here's a tip -- Don't give the Green Goblin a cruddy mask this time.)
Also, in much less interesting Marvel firing news, Stuart Townsend is out as Fandral in Kenneth Branagh's Thor, and has been replaced by Joshua Dallas of the forthcoming Red Tails and The Descent 2. Hmm...Perhaps he was still bitter about the whole Aragorn thing.
Casting for Kenneth Branagh's take on Thor fills out, with Jaimie Alexander and Colm Feore joining the cast. Alexander plays Sif, while "Feore's character is shrouded in mystery, though it is known to be a villain." (That spells trouble to me -- Be it stage or screen, Feore can be super-hammy.)
Whoever Feore is playing (Mephisto?), it's not Loki -- That would be Tom Hiddleston, appearing alongside "Papa Kirk" Chris Hemsworth as Thor and Natalie Portman as Jane Foster.
Meanwhile, the strange Aaron Sorkin-penned, David Fincher-directed Facebook movie, The Social Network, gets a cast in Jesse Eisenberg, Justin Timberlake, and Doctor Who alum Andrew Garfield (also soon to appear in Gilliam's Imaginarium.) "Eisenberg will play Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg; Timberlake will play Sean Parker, the Napster co-founder who became Facebook's founding president; and Andrew Garfield will play Eduardo Saverin, the Facebook co-founder who fell out with Zuckerberg over money."
Some of Summer 2009's new faces get their first Hollywood marching orders: Sharlton Copley of District 9 will play "Howling Mad" Murdock in Joe Carnahan's totally unnecessary movie version of The A-Team. He joins Liam Neeson (Hannibal), Bradley Cooper (Face), Quinton "Rampage" Jackson (B.A.) and Jessica Biel. And Inglourious Basterds's Christoph Waltz replaces Nicholas Cage as the Big Bad in Michel Gondry's The Green Hornet, joining Seth Rogen (Hornet), Jay Chou (Kato), Cameron Diaz, Edward James Olmos, David Harbour, and Tom Wilkinson.
Neither flick sounds all that memorable, but, after The Science of Sleep, Dave Chappelle's Block Party, and particularly Eternal Sunshine, Gondry still has a lifetime pass in this corner.
I missed this when it first broke back in March, but it seems the Coens have caught the remake bug, and are re-making True Grit, with Jeff Bridges in the John Wayne role. (No word on who's playing Kim Darby.)
"Not a traditional remake, the Paramount film will be more faithful to the Charles Portis book than the 1969 pic...while the original film was a showcase for Wayne, the Coens' version will tell the tale from the girl's p.o.v." Interesting...and it pretty much has to pan out better than the Coens' last remake.
"I have the most evil memories of Spain, but I have very few bad memories of Spaniards. I only twice remember even being seriously angry with a Spaniard, and on each occasion, when I look back, I believe I was in the wrong myself. They have, there is no doubt, a generosity, a species of nobility, that do not really belong to the twentieth century. It is this that makes one hope that in Spain even Fascism may take a comparatively loose and bearable form. Few Spaniards possess the damnable efficiency and consistency that a modern totalitarian state needs."
Apparently, Chariots of Fire director Hugh Hudson is now set to make a film version of Homage to Catalonia, George Orwell's autobiographical account of the Spanish Civil War. "The film will highlight the relationship between Orwell and Georges Kopp, the charismatic commander of the brigade. Colin Firth and Kevin Spacey are attached to star as Orwell and Kopp." Hmm. That relationship isn't what I remember taking away from the (excellent) book, and that casting actually sounds pretty terrible to me. (For Orwell, I'd go with someone like Paddy Considine. For Kopp, I'd go with someone who isn't Kevin Spacey.) But let's see how it goes.
Burn after Reading redux? Word comes down that George Clooney is set to star in Grant Heslov's The Men Who Stare at Goats with Ewan MacGregor, Kevin Spacey, and Jeff Bridges. "Based on true events described in Jon Ronson's 2004 book of the same title, 'Goats' involves a down-on-his-luck reporter (McGregor) who gets more than he bargains for when he meets a special forces agent (Clooney) who reveals the existence of a secret, psychic military unit whose goal is to use paranormal powers to end war as we know it." Look, if we're talking a psychic stare-down between Jeff Bridges and a goat, my money's on Bridges.
Casting fills out for Kenneth Branagh's Thor -- there's a phrase that should stay weird for awhile -- with the titular hero to be played by Chris Hemsworth (recently George "Papa" Kirk in Star Trek) and Branagh veteran Tom Hiddleston as Loki. Well, they both look the part, at least. So far, so good.
In recent casting news, Will Arnett and Michael Shannon saddle up for Jonah Hex, already with Josh Brolin, John Malkovich, and Megan Fox. "It's the story of Hex (Brolin), a scarred bounty hunter tracking a voodoo practitioner (Malkovich) who wants to raise an army of the undead to liberate the South. Arnett will play a Union soldier who enlists Hex and is blindsided by the dirty fighting style of his enemies. The role is not inherently comic. Shannon plays Doc Cross Williams, the bizarre ringleader of a brutal gladiator circus event. The character might appear in sequels."
Also on the comic-to-film front, Idris Elba and Zoe Saldana join The Losers, starring Jeffrey Dean Morgan and based on the Vertigo comic. (Or, put another way, Stringer Bell and Uhura are teaming up with the Comedian.) The comic "follows a Special Forces team betrayed by its handler and left for dead. The 'losers' regroup in the interest of revenge, the opportunity to remove their names from a secret CIA death list and to conduct covert operations against the CIA and its interests." Well, ok then. The only comic Losers I'm cognizant of are the WWII tank crew who bought it in Crisis, so I have no idea if this'll make a good movie or not.
And finally, the cast for Christopher Nolan's Inception fills out, with Marion Cotillard, Cillian Murphy, and Ellen Page all in talks to join Leonardo di Caprio in Nolan's "contemporary sci-fi actioner set within the architecture of the mind." (Murphy is the sole Nolan veteran of the three, having played the Scarecrow in both Batman films.)
Is April Fool's here a week early? Or are Sean Penn, Jim Carrey, and Benicio Del Toro really hunkering down to play Larry, Curly, and Moe respectively in the Farrelly brothers' Three Stooges? "The film is not a biopic, but rather a comedy built around the antics of the three characters that Moe Howard, Larry Fine and [Jerome] Howard played in the Columbia Pictures shorts."
Step aside, Mr. Bale: Leonardo di Caprio signs up for Chris Nolan's Inception, the director's self-penned and recently-announced big-think sci-fi piece which may or may not be a mental sorbet before Batman 3. Alrighty, then...Di Caprio tends to be solid in most anything, even if he's been miscast in a few clunkers like Gangs of New York.
A good bit of interesting news on the movie development front of late: Presumably given carte blanche from WB (provided he brings home another Batman in 2011 or 2012), Christopher Nolan announces his next project will be Inception, a self-penned story "'described as 'a contemporary sci-fi actioner set within the architecture of the mind.'" So, Minority Report meets Memento? I'll go.
In other news, David Cronenberg looks to go Bourne with The Matarese Circle, starring Denzel Washington and Tom Cruise as rival spies up against the same sinister conspiracy. The industrious Woody Allen has locked down the stars for his next (post-Larry David) project in Anthony Hopkins and Josh Brolin. (No other details forthcoming.) And, over on his other next film, Brolin has found a worthy antagonist for his Jonah Hex in none other than John Malkovich. "Malkovich will play Turnbull, a wealthy Southern plantation owner whose son is killed by Union soldiers during the Civil War. He blames Hex, a former confederate soldier-turned-hardened bounty hunter and gunslinger." Ah, movies. They just keep making more!

Word comes down today that (as rumored way back in 2004) Jamie Bell will replace Thomas Sangster as Tintin, and Daniel Craig will play the fearsome Red Rackham, in Steven Spielberg's forthcoming The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn, first of the planned mo-cap trilogy. Moreover, Shaun of the Dead scribe Edgar Wright has given Stephen Moffat's script a polish. (As reported earlier, Andy Serkis is Captain Haddock and Wright's usual brothers-in-arms are Thomson and Thompson respectively.)
Hmm. With Spielberg's first film likely covering Unicorn and Rackham, I wonder if PJ's contribution will involve Destination Moon/Explorers on the Moon or The Seven Crystal Balls/Prisoners of the Sun. And Toby Jones is now among the cast too, it seems...Professor Calculus?
In fanboy casting news, Tr2n (now just Tron) gets a lead in Garrett Hedlund, formerly of Troy and Friday Night Lights. "Hedlund will play the lead, a man who finds himself pulled into the world of a computer and retracing the steps of a character from the original movie named Kevin Flynn." (That would be Jeff Bridges.) And also coming along for the ride, Tron himself, Bruce Boxleitner.
Meanwhile, Jon Favreau's Iron Man 2, which is currently still being written by actor Justin Theroux, may have locked down its villains in Sam Rockwell and Mickey Rourke. Rockwell seems to be up for Stark's industrialist rival Justin Hammer, while Rourke will reportedly suit up as the Crymson Dynamo.

Doctor, doctor, can't you see they're burning, burning? I missed this rumor when it first got some run last September, but apparently AICN has confirmed it: Fanboy brothers-in-arms Simon Pegg and Nick Frost of Spaced, Shaun of the Dead, and Hot Fuzz have been cast as the Thompson twins in the forthcoming PJ/Spielberg Tintin films. Now that's great casting, particularly as they're pretty much impossible to tell apart.
In other Tintin news I missed, Thomas Sangster (a.k.a. Tintin) is now off the project due to scheduling conflicts (and writer Stephen Moffatt also left to pursue Who.) But Andy Serkis is still Haddock, and Jackson and Spielberg are still directing the first two installments.
Best start working on your frisbee skills: Casting for Joseph Kosinski's Tron 2.0 or (TR2N) begins, with Olivia WIlde of House and Beau Garrett of Turistas joining the returning Jeff Bridges back in the original matrix. "Wilde will play a worker in the virtual world who tries to help fight Master Control Program, the villainous intelligence protocol that was the nemesis in the original film. Garrett will play a siren in the virtual world." Hmm, ok. Can we get David Warner in here somewhere? I know Sark is dead and all, but it seems like Ed Dillinger, the big bad of the first film, might well've made a backup, and Warner always adds a touch of class to the proceedings.
With Burn after Reading mere weeks away (Sept. 12, in fact), the brothers Coen cast their next flick, A Serious Man, with relative unknown Michael Stuhlbarg in the title role and Spin City's Richard Kind along for the ride as a deadbeat brother. As noted here, Serious involves "a Jewish college professor in the Midwest during the 1960s [who] seeks to solve his existential issues from men of God." Sounds like serious business.
"Much of the pic's dialogue is in French or German, and subtitles will be used, though Pitt will speak English in his role as a Tennessee hillbilly who assembles a team of eight Jewish-American soldiers to take on the Nazis." Brad Pitt officially signs up for QT's forthcoming WWII epic, Inglorious Bastards. Also in negotiations to join the project at the moment: Nastassja Kinski, Simon Pegg, David Krumholtz, and B.J. Novak.
Hmm...I dunno. I haven't read the script, which I heard was floating around, and probably won't before I see the movie. I'd like to think that this'll be a return to the form of Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, and Jackie Brown for Tarantino. But the Kill Bills and Death Proof were so loopy, bloated, and self-indulgent that I fear QT has entered George Lucas territory, meaning that he's surrounded by sycophantic yes-men and has sadly disappeared up his own ass, never to emerge again. And casting his buddy, torture-porn director Eli Roth, first only increases my wariness that this'll be yet another self-referential bric-a-brac homage to exploitation flicks of the past. Still, hope springs eternal.
Wonka redux? Word is Johnny Depp will be suiting up as the Mad Hatter for Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland, in 3D. (Burton cast his Alice last week: Australian Mia Wasikowska, recently of In Treatment.) Alrighty then...but after Wonka, Dr. Thompson, and Captain Jack, hasn't Depp already thoroughly crashed this tea party?
Will James McAvoy play Bilbo Baggins? That's the current rumor. "[D]irector del Toro adds, 'I can tell you it's down to a few names that we all agree upon. For our first choice, completely magically we all have the same name.'"
"Like Guillermo says, apart from extreme circumstances, we would never recast a character who appeared in the LOTR trilogy. You can read The Hobbit and pretty much see which characters play a part. The unknown facter is Film Two, which we are still developing." Over the weekend, Peter Jackson and Guillermo del Toro ventured online to discuss The Hobbit. Not much in the way of news made (other than the quote above), although it's worth reading for Del Toro's thoughts on Smaug, among other things. It does sound like they're winging this second "filler" movie, tho', which could be real trouble.
What's stranger than Christian Bale as John Connor in McG's forthcoming Terminator trilogy? How about the one and only Charlotte Gainsbourg reprising Claire Danes' character from the third film? Uh, really, what are y'all doing in this hackmeisterly cash-grab?
Update: Order is restored: Gainsbourg is out, and Bryce Dallas Howard is in. That sadly makes more sense.
Oliver Stone's W finally gets its Cheney: Richard Dreyfuss. He joins Josh Brolin (Dubya), Elizabeth Banks (Laura), James Cromwell (41), Ellen Burstyn (Barbara), Jeffrey Wright (Powell), Thandie Newton (Rice), Ioan Gruffudd (Blair), and Scott Glenn (Rummy).
Update: I missed this last week: The role of Karl Rove goes to Toby Jones, a.k.a. the other Capote.
The casting of Oliver Stone's W continues apace, with Scott Glenn as Donald Rumsfeld. That's pretty good...Wish I'd thought of that.
By way of Supercres, more interesting casting has come in on Oliver Stone's W. Already a veteran of parroting fake news, The Daily Show's Rob Corddry will play Ari Fleischer, while chameleon Jeffrey Wright is in talks to play Colin Powell. Good and good.
The first family set, Oliver Stone's W picks up some Dubya admin hangers-on: namely, Thandie Newton as Condi Rice and Ioan Gruffudd as Tony Blair. Those are both solid. "Among the key "W" roles yet to be cast are those of Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and Karl Rove."

Dubya gets his damsel: Elizabeth Banks will play Laura Bush in Oliver Stone's forthcoming W, with Josh Brolin in the title role. W starts shooting next month in Shreveport. As a admirer of Stone's Nixon, I for one am looking forward to the finished product.
Update: Here comes 41. Stone casts James Cromwell and Ellen Burstyn as George H.W. and Barbara Bush respectively.
"Encouragingly, Peter and Fran Walsh have told me they couldn't imagine The Hobbit without their original Gandalf. Their confidence hasn't yet been confirmed by the director Guillermo del Toro but I am keeping my diary free for 2009!" Grey Havens be damned, Ian McKellen reports he's likely returning as Gandalf for The Hobbit (well, if he and producer Peter Jackson have anything to say about it, and they probably will.) Update: More good news: Composer Howard Shore is back as well.
Also in movie news, the viral marketing campaign for The Dark Knight is picking up again. As you may remember, a slew of new Gotham-related sites appeared last December. Now, more have arrived, of a distinctly Harvey Dent bent: A new edition of The Gotham Times, Dana Worthington for DA (a.k.a. Harvey Dent's opposition), Maiden Avenue Report (Gotham's Drudge, it seems), Citizens for Batman, St. Swithuns Church, and Gotham Cable News are all now online, along with the Dent campaign site linked to the other day. Also, apparently the original marketing plan was always to shift from the Joker to Harvey Dent, so this rollout hasn't necessarily been affected by the loss of Ledger. (That being said, viral text messages seem to indicate the Clown Prince of Crime will pop up yet again before April Fool's Day.)
"An executive who worked with Sangster in Los Angeles recently told me: 'Thomas seems to be the one. He was just great, but I'm not certain if anything has been finalised yet.'" Spielberg and PJ look to have found their Tintin, and it's Thomas Sangster, formerly of Love, Actually (but I'll try not to hold it against him.) He joins Andy Serkis as Captain Haddock and...hey, it's mocap...can we get Berk as Snowy/Milou?
"Exhausted, I slept across the grave...I saw the Black Freighter bearing down on all I loved, but I was powerless to stop it." Zack Snyder alum Gerard Butler reveals his upcoming part in Watchmen: He'll be narrating the Tales of the Black Freighter digression for the DVD version. "'I'm going to do the voice of the captain,' said Butler. 'They're going to do it in the style of a Japanese anime and I'm totally stoked." Anime? Hrm.
Soon after Heath Ledger's untimely death (ultimately ruled an accident) a few weeks ago, there was a rumor floating around that Johnny Depp would step in to save Terry Gilliam's Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus by playing the "mirror-world" Heath. ("There is a point in the film when Heath falls through a magic mirror. He could change into another character after that and that is where Johnny would come in.") As it turns out, the truth is even more interesting. According to AICN, Johnny Depp, Jude Law and Colin Farrell have all signed on for Imaginarium to pay tribute to Ledger and to help salvage his final performance. All class acts...here's hoping Gilliam can make something special out of Ledger's final bow.
"'I have a really, really insane take on how to tell it. It's so outrageous,' Liman said. 'Ultimately, I'd be doing something no one has ever done before. Therefore it's automatically appealing to me. I'm just starting to explore whether [what I have in mind] is even possible to do.'" Doug Liman, director of The Bourne Identity, Mr. & Mrs. Smith, and the upcoming Jumper, promotes his next project, a Valerie Plame biopic starring Nicole Kidman. Maybe he can get Josh Brolin to pull double duty as Dubya.
"Here, I'm the referee, and I want a fair, true portrait of the man. How did Bush go from an alcoholic bum to the most powerful figure in the world? It's like Frank Capra territory on one hand, but I'll also cover the demons in his private life, his bouts with his dad and his conversion to Christianity, which explains a lot of where he is coming from. It includes his belief that God personally chose him to be president of the United States, and his coming into his own with the stunning, preemptive attack on Iraq. It will contain surprises for Bush supporters and his detractors." No joke: Oliver Stone announces his next project will be a George W. Bush biopic, with Josh Brolin attached. I must admit, as someone who really liked Nixon, I'm curious to see where he goes with it.
Official word comes down that newcomer Gemma Arterton (seen at right as Rosaline in Love's Labour's Lost) will be 007's next love interest (or one of them, at least) in Bond 22, tentatively called 007 and due out this Christmas. She joins Daniel Craig (in his second Bond outing), Jeffrey Wright (returning as Felix Leiter), and Mathieu Almaric as the villain. "Arterton will play 'Fields' in the Marc Forster-directed movie...Details of her character were not available, but a Danjaq rep said 'it's a nice-sized role.' The film will take up where 2006's 'Casino Royale' left off."
Move over Lincoln Liam and Sally Todd: It seems Steven Spielberg's next post-Indy project may involve Sasha Baron Cohen as Abbie Hoffman in The Trial of the Chicago Seven (not to be confused with the Seattle Seven, i.e. the Dude "and, uh, six other guys.") "The Spielberg film is said to be closer to Munich...than to his next Indiana Jones frolic, due in the summer." Could be good, and Cohen is dead-on casting. Still, I've been looking forward to Spielberg's Lincoln, and the Hoffman story was done rather recently with Vincent D'Onofrio and Steal this Movie. Update: Concerning the rest of the cast, the recent Vanity Fair Indy article suggests Philip Seymour Hoffman is up for William Kunstler (i.e. the Chicago 7's lawyer) and that Will Smith, Taye Diggs, Adam Arkin, and Kevin Spacey are also being considered for roles.
Peace on Earth, goodwill to Mad Men: Jon Hamm, a.k.a. Dick Whitman/Don Draper, joins the cast of Scott Derrickson's The Day The Earth Stood Still remake, currently starring Keanu Reeves (the alien) and Jennifer Connelly. "Hamm will play Dr. Granier, a NASA official who recruits Helen (Connelly) for the scientific team investigating an alien's arrival on Earth." Hamm's impressive on Mad Men, and it'll be good to see him make the leap to the Big Screen...but an unnecessary remake of a 50's sci-fi classic from the director of The Exorcism of Emily Rose? I have doubts.
Dictatorial duck billed diplodocus! Motion-capture veteran Andy Serkis joins Peter Jackson and Steven Spielberg's Tintin trilogy, most likely as the inimitable Captain Haddock.
No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to Dive...Mathieu Almaric is confirmed as Daniel Craig's next nemesis in Bond 22.
Viggo Mortensen as Edgar Allan Poe? Quite possibly. Apparently Mortensen is thinking of signing on for the Sylvester Stallone-helmed biopic, "although he wants some slight revisions in the script." Maybe take out that Ivan Drago sequence.
Matt Frewer (best known as Max Headroom, of '80s television) joins the cast of Zach Snyder's Watchmen as Moloch the Mystic, the team's formerly satanic, now born-again nemesis. Extra points to Snyder for choosing a fanboy veteran.
Mickey Rourke signs on to play The Wrestler for Darren Aronofsky, set to begin shooting this January. (He replaces Nicholas Cage in the role.) And, more casting on the Star Trek reboot front: Bruce Greenwood is Capt. Christopher Pike, Winona Ryder is Spock's mother, Amanda Grayson, and House's Jennifer Morrison and P2's Rachel Nichols are in too, possibly as Yeoman Rand and/or Nurse Chapel. Well, ok then. Update: Another Trek addition: Clifton Collins Jr. of Capote will play Big Bad Eric Bana's #2.
"Let me be the way I'm not in interviews. I'm furious. I'm furious...They never asked me about a sequel with the Joker. I know how to do that! Nobody ever asked me." Strangely enough, apparently Jack Nicholson wanted another run at the Joker for Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight. "Well, the Joker comes from my childhood. That's how I got involved with it in the first place. It's a part I always thought I should play." Well, maybe so, but even back in 1989 Nicholson seemed like stunt casting, and his performance hasn't aged well. Here's to a new take on the character.
He'll need more dilithium crystals, Captain...Following news that Chris Pine has been offered the role of James T. Kirk and that Eric Bana will play the villain ("Nero") in J.J. Abrams' Star Trek reboot, Simon Pegg joins the Enterprise crew as Montgomery Scott. Ooh, that'll be fun. Perhaps we'll get Nick Frost as a Redshirt? Update: And another. John Cho, best known as Harold of Harold & Kumar, will suit up as Sulu. Update 2: And now McCoy...Karl Urban.
Looks like Batman's taking the fight to clean up Gotham City to its source: Javier Bardem and Christian Bale enlist for Joe Carnahan's version of Mark Bowden's Killing Pablo, about the Delta Force hunt for Colombian druglord Pablo Escobar (and one has to believe Bardem will be better in the title role than Adrian Grenier.)
Liam Neeson has his Mary Todd: Sally Field joins Spielberg's forthcoming Lincoln biopic as Abe's First Lady.
Speaking of Indy IV, Dr. Jones' new colleague, Jim Broadbent, is cast as professor and celeb hound Horace Slughorn for Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. That works.
In Marvel news, the the teaser for Jon Favreau's take on Iron Man, with Robert Downey, Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow, Terence Howard, and Jeff Bridges, is now officially online. (Basically, it's a shortened version of the Comicon clip.) And has Matthew Vaughn found his Thor in Kevin McKidd of HBO's Rome and Trainspotting? Possibly maybe...if so, that's not half-bad.
Waugh, waugh. Move over, Phillip Seymour Hoffman...Has Oswald Cobblepot been cast? (Nah, Cheney would work better.) Vermont Senator, Senate Judiciary Chairman, and Batman fan Patrick Leahy joins the cast of Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight. "Leahy is apparently a big comic book enthusiast, and actually served as an extra in the 1997 Batman installment: Batman and Robin." (He also played himself on Batman: The Animated Series.) "The senator told the station he can't reveal the exact details of his role in the upcoming movie, but he did say he has landed a scene with its two stars, Christian Bale and Heath Ledger."
The lovely Carla Gugino (Sin City, Spy Kids, late of Entourage) joins Zach Snyder's Watchmen as Sally Jupiter, a.k.a. the original Silk Spectre. A solid choice (although she doesn't really look related to Malin Ackerman.)
Tyrese Gibson, Jason Statham, and Joan Allen are cast in a forthcoming remake of the 1975 cult film Death Race 2000, to be helmed by (notorious hack) Paul W. S. Anderson. Uh, Joan Allen? That's "Judi Dench in The Chronicles of Riddick" weird. Update: Al Swearingen's in too.
"Indiana Jones. I always knew some day you'd come walking back through my door. I never doubted that. Something made it inevitable." Careful Cate...Dr. Jones' original inamorata is back on the scene, and she's got a mean right hook. Official word (and picture) comes down that Karen Allen is returning as Marion Ravenwood in Indy 4, which is definitely a welcome inclusion. Update: More pics, and a Comic-Con presentation rundown, here.
Also, some casting news that emerged on the eve of Comic-Con: First, the Watchmen cast is now official -- yes, it's finally happening -- and it is as rumored (along with Jeffrey Dean Morgan of Grey's Anatomy -- um, ok -- as The Comedian.) And, for the trekkies out there, it seems Matthew Quinto, a.k.a. Heroes Big Bad Sylar, has been cast as Starfleet Academy-era Spock for J.J. Abrams' Trek movie. (Also, strange to discover from this article that Abrams and Greg Grunberg, the mind-reading cop of Heroes, are childhood best friends.) Now, Quinto is a good physical match...a highly logical choice. But Sam Rockwell as James T. Kirk? That's genius. (Spock pic not official -- I found it here.) Update: Another casting note: Tim Blake Nelson joins Louis Leterrier's Incredible Hulk revamp as Dr. Samuel Sterns (a.k.a. The Leader), further swelling an already ridiculously tricked-out cast for a remake of a movie made less than five years ago. But, hey, gift horses and all that.
More casting for Zach Snyder's take on Watchmen: Jackie Earle Haley and Patrick Wilson (both of Little Children) now seems all but confirmed as Rorschach and Nite-Owl respectively. As Dr. Manhattan, Billy Crudup. As Silk Spectre, Malin Ackerman of Harold and Kumar. And as Ozymandias, Matthew Goode of Match Point. Well, no egregious misfires in that bunch (and not much star power either, which may make the suits nervous. Fine by me.) Now, it'll all come down to Snyder.
Dr. Henry Jones, Jr. garners some more distinguished colleagues for Indy 4 with announcements that John Hurt has joined the film (some sites say as Albert Einstein, others as Abner Ravenwood), as has Jim Broadbent (in what's likely to be a Marcus Brody-type role.) Already on board: Cate Blanchett, Shia La Boeuf, and Ray Winstone.
Also in comic-to-film news, there's more rumors of close-to-official casting for Zach Snyder's Watchmen happening. Keanu Reeves apparently passed on Dr. Manhattan, so now they're looking for, um, Jason Patric in that role. (I'm not seeing it, frankly, but he's no better or worse than Keanu, I guess.) Also rumored, Thomas Jane as the Comedian, and, as Rorschach, Little Children's Jackie Earle Haley. That's actually not half bad.
Can't say I'm all that excited about the project, but I am obviously a fan of the director: The lovely Rachel Weisz joins Peter Jackson's version of The Lovely Bones, as the mother of the narrator, it seems.
In Marvel comic-to-film news, William Hurt joins Louis Letterier's increasingly-stacked The Incredible Hulk as Gen. Thad "Thunderbolt" Ross. (The movie, it may be remembered, already stars Edward Norton, Liv Tyler, and Tim Roth.) And, also rumored to be in the works: a Silver Surfer film written by J. Michael Straczynski of Babylon 5 (Will the character have any life in him after FF2 this weekend? I somehow doubt it) and a Thor film directed by Matthew Vaughan of Layer Cake and Stardust. (Ooh...can we get Beta Ray Bill?)
Breaking a few weeks ago now, AICN claims to have the skinny on the initial casting of Zach Snyder's version of Watchmen. Rumored as the Nite-Owl, Patrick Wilson of The Alamo and Little Children. (He's a bit buff for the role, frankly. I'd expected someone a little more gone to seed, like John Cusack or even Tom Hulce.) As Doctor Manhattan, Neo himself, Keanu Reeves. (Um, ok. I don't really see that working. Then again, I don't really see anyone else working either, this side of Gollum-style CGI) And, as Ozymandias, much-avowed Watchmen fan Jude Law. (That's pretty good, although somebody like Aaron Eckhart would be even better.) That's it so far, other than that Snyder -- who won't deny these casting rumors -- has promised he'd get Gerard Butler of 300 in there somewhere. (Why bother? I don't remember any character who's supposed to YELL...ALL...THE...TIME.) At any rate, that means Simon Pegg as Rorschach is still a possibility, if one that is very, very remote.
Elijah Wood as Iggy Pop? Um, I'm not sure I see it. But, in more intriguing entertainment news, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Ewan MacGregor will team up for Othello on the London stage, as Othello and Iago respectively. That'd be great to see.
I have to say, I continue to be completely thrown by what's emerging from Louis Leterrier's Incredible Hulk do-over. Now joining Ed Norton as Bruce Banner are Liv Tyler as the love interest (Betty Ross, a.k.a. Jennifer Connelly in the Ang Lee version) and, more interestingly, Tim Roth as the villain, Emil Blonsky a.k.a. Abomination. Norton v. Roth in a chew-and-smash-the-scenery contest? That should be great fun.
He's seen a world that no man should see. Now he's suiting up as the lead in the Coen brothers' Burn after Reading, with George Clooney, Frances McDormand, and Brad Pitt. It's good to be John Malkovich.
You know what the next Batman movie needs? That certain straight-to-video je-ne-sais-quoi...Eric Roberts joins the cast of Chris Nolan's The Dark Knight, as "a Mafia kingpin."
It's a good time to be a Coen fan (but isn't it always?) Not only is their version of Cormac McCarthy's No Country for Old Men in the can (and at Cannes), but casting is filling out for their next project, Burn after Reading. Joining George Clooney in this second flick, his Oceans A-List stablemate Brad Pitt (long attached to a failed Coen project, To the White Sea.)
As closure to the Indy 4 casting rumors posted a few weeks ago: It turns out that Shia La Boeuf is in fact in for Dr. Jones' fourth adventure (as is Cate Blanchett and Ray Winstone, but sadly, no Sallah), likely as the prodigal son. La Boeuf seems like a solid actor, all in all, but as I said before, I've got a bad feeling about this.
Even after Tyler Durden, apparently, he still has rage issues: Edward Norton signs up to play Louis Leterrier's Incredible Hulk. Interesting -- I was expecting this movie, coming so soon after Ang Lee's botch, to be basically a straight-to-video do-over. But Norton's presence is, without a doubt, an X-factor, and now I'm actually intrigued by it.
He is the monarch of the sea...? Word hits that Ray Winstone of Sexy Beast, The Departed and The Proposition has signed on for Indiana Jones IV. "Although the film's plot is being closely guarded, sources said Winstone will play star Harrison Ford's sidekick."
AICN's Moriarty points the way to these worth-perusing Star Wars/Steampunk mash-up sketches. And, also via AICN, Hugo Weaving will voice Megatron in Michael Bay's The Transformers. Can't say I'm all that interested in Transformers (or any other Michael Bay project. for that matter), but Weaving invariably adds a touch of class to sci-fi/fantasy proceedings.
Raise the Titanic! The doomed ship's power couple, Kate Winslet and Leonardo di Caprio, reunite for Sam Mendes' forthcoming Revolutionary Road. "The DreamWorks project, based on the 1961 novel by Richard Yates, revolves around a suburban couple caught between their hopes for a life of art, culture and sophistication and the everyday drudgery of boring jobs and domesticity." (And, speaking of Titanic, I saw some of it again on TNT a few weeks ago and, while I knew Theoden King (Bernard Hill) was also the ship captain, I hadn't realized until then that Mr. Fantastic/Horatio Hornblower, Ioan Gruffudd, played Officer Lowe.) Add that to your Kevin Bacon list.
Also breaking during my west coast sojourn, the lovely Cate Blanchett will apparently star in Indy IV, I'm presuming as Dr. Jones' love interest. Well, Blanchett definitely adds star wattage and acting chops to the ledger. But, really, doesn't Jones have unfinished business with Marian Ravenwood? Act your age, Indy.
It's official: Maggie Gyllenhaal takes Katie Holmes' place in Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight. And, with Tobey Maguire appearing to beg off any future webslinger installments after Spidey 3, the door is now wide open for Maggie's brother Jake...
Also in fanboy casting and Spielberg news, Shia La Boeuf -- confirmed by Variety only yesterday -- shoots down rumors that he's been cast as the progeny of Indiana Jones. "Would he deny it if offered though? The IESB says according to him 'depends on what the script is about, he doesn't want to go in as just a sidekick character'."
If adventure has a name, it must be...Shia LaBoeuf? AICN and others report a rumor that the Transformers/Bobby actor is set to play Indy's son in the forthcoming Indiana Jones sequel. Nothing against LaBoeuf, but the idea of an Indy Jr. running around with Ford and Connery sets off red flags for me, particularly given George Lucas' recent track record.
As rumored a few weeks ago and in a bit of inspired casting, Aaron Eckhart looks set to join Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight as Harvey Dent, a.k.a. Two-Face. And, also in fanboy casting news, the cast of James Cameron's Avatar fills out, with Wes Studi, Sigourney Weaver, and others joining Sam Worthington and Zoe Saldana for the 3D-epic.
The Power of the Dark Crystal, the sequel to the 1982 muppet fantasy announced last year, has officially been put on hiatus. (Sorry, Gelflings.) And Latino Review, breakers of the Heath Ledger Joker casting, says Thank You for Smoking's Aaron Eckhart is now in line to play Harvey Dent (a.k.a. Two-Face) in Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight. Great choice. (Also, apparently Katie Holmes has been kicked off the Batman Begins sequel -- word is she'll be replaced by Emily Blunt, Rachel McAdams, or Maggie Gyllenhaal.)
Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Catherine Keener, Michelle Williams, Samantha Morton, and Tilda Swinton line up behind Charlie Kaufman's next project, Synecdoche, New York. "Hoffman will play a theater director who ambitiously attempts to put on a play by creating a life-size replica of New York inside a warehouse...Keener is set to play his first wife, Williams will play his second wife, Morton will appear as his sometime lover, and Swinton will portray Keener's best friend and the dubious mentor to the daughter of Hoffman and Keener's characters."
"The Banshees and the other creatures are going to be about 90% or 95% animated. And with the humanoids hopefully we're going to be coming down to 95% capture with the exception of ears and like I said clothing and hair and stuff like that." I'm behind on this one -- Sorry, I've been saving up links to space out the flurry of movie reviews, and then overestimating how much I can actually get written on a given day -- but James Cameron has announced more details about Avatar (not to be confused with M. Night Shyamalan's Avatar, which I couldn't case less about) and granted AICN's Harry Knowles an extended interview on the performance-capture project. Set for a 2009 release, the film will "star" Sam Worthington (recently in the Aussie Macbeth update) and Zoe Saldana (late of Pirates of the Caribbean II.)
Alan Rickman joins Tim Burton's forthcoming version of Sweeney Todd, already with Burton stalwarts Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter...as well as Sasha Baron Cohen. Verrry nice.
While writing up his set visit of The Golden Compass on his official site, author Phillip Pullman inadvertently leaks that Sam Elliot is playing Lee Scoresby. That works.
Some big-time action franchises verge closer to their villains: Syriana's Jeffrey Wright may face up against a DC-based John McClane in Live Free or Die Hard (a.k.a. Die Hard 4), while United 93/Bourne 2 director Paul Greengrass looks to enlist The Science of Sleep's Gael Garcia Bernal as the Big Bad of The Bourne Ultimatum, a film which also recently procured David Straithairn.
Method casting? Robert Downey Jr. signs up as troubled alcoholic billionaire Tony Stark, a.k.a. Iron Man, for director Jon Favreau.
Casting on Chris Weitz's version of Philip Pullman's The Golden Compass continues, with new Bond Daniel Craig joining Nicole Kidman and Eva Green as Lord Asriel, Lyra's uncle.
It's official (and Latino Review is 2-for-2): Heath Ledger will be suiting up as the Joker in Christopher Nolan's sequel to Batman Begins, now called The Dark Knight. Ok, I can dig it...now, who's Harvey Dent?
Chris Weitz's film version of The Golden Compass closes in on its Mrs. Coulter: Nicole Kidman.
Along with word of an unfortunately actioned-up Watchman script and news of some stranger-than-usual comic adaptations (The Doom Patrol? Frank Miller on Will Eisner's Spirit? Benico Del Toro's Deadman?), Latino Review -- the site that first announced Brandon Routh as Superman in 2004 -- discloses that Heath Ledger has an offer to play the Joker in Christopher Nolan's next Batman flick. Hmm. An interesting and slightly-out-of-left-field choice...He wouldn't have been one of my top picks for the part (Adrien Brody, Sam Rockwell, Paul Bettany, or how 'bout Ralph Reed?...His calendar's open), but he's definitely better than some names that were floating around (Crispin Glover, Robin Williams, Michael Keaton, Sean Penn.)
Vince Vaughn as, um, former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill? Casting begins for Paul Haggis' film version of Against All Enemies, with Sean Penn purportedly up for the Richard Clarke role. Does that mean we'll get the rest of the Frat Pack playing Dubya admin officials? Ben Stiller as Ari Fleischer, Owen Wilson as Scooter Libby, and I think we can all guess where Will Ferrell would fit in...
In fanboy casting news, Philip Pullman's The Golden Compass is a go at New Line under director Chris Weitz, with newcomer Dakota Blue Richards cast in the role of Lyra. Also, Johnny Depp joins Will Smith in I am Legend (a.k.a. The Omega Man, for those who haven't read the Matheson novella), likely as Smith's neighbor, and head of the vampires. That casting should significantly increase the fun factor.
Ewan MacGregor, Colin Farrell, and Tom Wilkinson sign aboard Woody Allen's next project, set to begin filming next month in London. MacGregor and Farrell "will play two brothers with serious financial problems that lead them to become enemies when a third party suggests they turn to crime."
According to Dark Horizons, Heath Ledger will replace Colin Farrell as Bob Dylan in Todd Haynes' forthcoming Bob biopic I'm Not There. Purportedly also playing Dylan in the film are Christian Bale, Cate Blanchett, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Richard Gere, and Julianne Moore.
The vocal cast for Where the Wild Things Are fills out, with Benicio Del Toro, Michael Berry Jr., Paul Dano, Tom Noonan, Catherine O'Hara, Forest Whitaker and Michelle Williams joining in Spike Jonze's after-bedtime shenanigans.
The long-stalled film version of Richard Matheson's I am Legend (or third version, if you want to count Last Man on Earth and Charlton Heston's The Omega Man) moves forward with Will Smith in the lead and Constantine's Francis Lawrence at the helm. Hmmm. Will Smith can be a good actor at times, but the fact that hackmeister Akiva Goldsman penned the script suggests to me that this'll be a forgettable adaptation.
In casting news, Al Pacino joins Ellen Barkin and the usual suspects in Stephen Soderbergh's Ocean's Thirteen, where he'll play "Willie Banks, the owner of a high-profile casino and hotel in Las Vegas." And, fresh from A History of Violence, Viggo Mortensen re-ups with David Cronenberg for Eastern Promises, a project penned by Dirty Pretty Things' Steve Knight.
Have Darren Aronofsky's The Fountain and Mel Gibson's Apocalypto started a trend? Antonio Banderas signs on to Conquistador, a biopic of Hernando Cortes.
It looks like the rumors are true, and Steven Soderbergh's Ocean's Thirteen is a go, with everyone returning (except possibly Julia Roberts and Catherine Zeta Jones) to shoot this summer for a 2007 release. Also joining in the fun this go 'round is Ellen Barkin, who will have something to do with Matt Damon's character.
Tear me apart and boil my bones...Cate Blanchett is set to once again play the Virgin Queen in a sequel to 1998's Elizabeth, one that will also include Samantha Morton as Mary Queen of Scots.
After finishing up Che, Benicio del Toro will channel Lon Chaney Jr. in The Wolf Man, yet another remake in the pipeline. Hopefully it's more Mummy than Van Helsing.
Ken Watanabe will head the cast of Clint Eastwood's Red Sun, his forthcoming companion piece to Iwo Jima film Flags of our Fathers. "Eastwood, who is in post with 'Flags,' will shoot the companion entirely in Japanese."
Extra, Extra: Coming Soon publishes the first pic of Sam Huntington as Superman's Pal, Jimmy Olsen.
Simon Pegg and Edgar Wright of the "hugely successful romzomcom" Shaun of the Dead announce the cast and details of their next project, the buddy-cop movie Hot Fuzz. Pegg will play a London cop who gets sent out to the sticks (Somerset), where he's teamed up with new partner Nick Frost (also of Shaun.) Around to stir up trouble for this dynamic duo are a murderer's row of British hams, including Jim Broadbent, Steve Coogan, Martin Freeman, and Timothy Dalton.
Catherine Keener joins Spike Jonze's Where the Wild Things Are, which looks set to go, as Max's Mom (and the instigator of his adventures in the Wild kingdom.)
Kingdom of Heaven's Eva Green joins Casino Royale as Bond girl Vesper Lynd (It seems Rose Byrne wilted), along with Syriana's Jeffrey Wright as the new Felix Leiter and King Arthur's Mads Mikkelsen as the Big Bad, Le Chiffre.
Looks like Spielberg and Neeson's Lincoln may have started a welcome trend. Trading in the aviator glasses for pince-nez, Leonardo di Caprio will apparently star as TR in Martin Scorsese's The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt, based on the Edmund Morris biography. Hmm...I can see that, provided the film doesn't carry too far into the presidential years. Bully for him.
Javier Bardem and Tommy Lee Jones look set to enter No Country for Old Men for the Coen Brothers, from a book by Cormac McCarthy. "Set in West Texas in 1980, the story is about a young Vietnam vet who stumbles over the remnants of a drug deal gone bad. He's hunted by two extremely vicious assassins who want the money back." My, that's a Coenesque plot line. (Hail Caesar!, their other current project, is apparently expected to start shooting soon.)
The cast for Order of the Phoenix is announced, with Helen McCrory as Bellatrix Lestrange, Natalia Tena as Nymphadora Tonks, Kathryn Hunter as Mrs. Figg, and newcomer Evanna Lynch as Luna Lovegood. (Previously announced were George Harris and Imelda Staunton.) I have no sense of any of these actors, but they all seem to look the part.
Joining Imelda Staunton for Year 5 at Hogwarts, veteran actor George Harris will play Kingsley Shacklebolt in the forthcoming Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (set to begin filming next month.) You may recognize him as Capt. Katanga in Raiders of the Lost Ark, or, more recently, as Morty in Layer Cake.
Curiouser and curiouser...The Village's Bryce Dallas Howard joins Spiderman 3 as none other than Gwen Stacy, Peter Parker's doomed childhood sweetheart. I find this somewhat strange, since they'd basically turned Kirsten Dunst's Mary Jane Watson into Gwen Stacy in the first film (#6). (Plus, they've switched hair-colors, but ah well.)
Byrne. Rose Byrne. Word is that's who been tapped to play the next Bond girl ("Vesper Lynd") opposite Daniel Craig in Casino Royale. (Prior to this gig and Sofia Coppola's upcoming Marie Antoinette, she was in Troy, Wicker Park, and I Capture the Castle.) But who's playing Moneypenny?
Even more fanboy prestige for The Prestige: AICN reports that Gollum/Kong creator Andy Serkis has joined the cast of Christopher Nolan's version, as an assistant to Nicola Tesla (David Bowie). He joins Bowie, Christian Bale, Hugh Jackman, Scarlett Johannson, and Michael Caine.
And another spate of Batman casting rumors. This time 'round it's Johnny Depp as the Joker and Rachel Weisz as Talia (Liam Neeson/Ras Al Ghul's daughter.) With the Penguin (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and Harvey Dent/Two-Face (Liev Schrieber) also purportedly in the mix, it sounds like something's got to give.
From Truman Capote to Oswald Cobblepot? Word is Philip Seymour Hoffman is in talks to play the Penguin in the next Bale Batman, while Sam Rockwell is angling for the Clown Prince of Crime.
Scarlett Johanssen joins Chris Nolan's version of The Prestige as Olivia, the lovely assistant to magicians Christian Bale and Hugh Jackman. And, also in film news, Stephen Soderbergh's next project after The Good German will be Guerilla, a Che Guevara biopic starring Benjamin Bratt.
The consistently interesting Peter Weir chooses his next project: Shantaram, with Johnny Depp. "The story follows an Australian heroin addict who escapes a maximum-security prison and reinvents himself in India as a doctor in the slums of Bombay. His attempt to find medicine for his destitute patients leads him into counterfeiting, gunrunning and smuggling." But will they be trying to tempt him, because he comes from the land of plenty?
Ground Control to Major Tom: So Michael Caine won't be Nikola Tesla in Chris Nolan's The Prestige (also with Christian Bale & Hugh Jackman)...That's part's gone to the inimitable David Bowie, who's been basically out of the film scene since Basquiat in 1996. Now that's fun casting.
In other comic-film news, more X-Trouble on the horizon: In keeping with schlockmeister Brett Ratner's earlier-professed desire to sex up the X-Men, X3 adds two come-hither mutants: Mercedes Scelba-Shorte of America's Next Top Model as M/Monet St. Croix (from Generation X, which is after my time..they're the new New Mutants, I guess) and Ashley Hartman of The OC as Emma Frost, the White Queen (formerly a villain, until reconceived during the Grant Morrison run.) I guess this means we'll never get a full Hellfire Club X-film, which is particularly depressing after reading a fanboy dream-cast Deadwood's Ian McShane as Sebastian Shaw, the Black King, in the AICN talkback. That would've been ten kinds of perfect.
Sorry, Mr. Wayne...Alfred's turned on you. Michael Caine joins Chris Nolan's version of The Prestige, starring Christian Bale and Hugh Jackman. "Caine will play a retired magician who teaches tricks to Jackman's character, who has developed a bitter rivalry with another magician (Bale)." Would that be Nicola Tesla?
Imelda Staunton announces she'll play Dolores Umbridge in Order of the Phoenix, while Ralph Fiennes talks more about Voldemort.
Leonardo di Caprio (who still looks 18, despite the mustache) ventures into the mouth of madness in the full trailer for Martin Scorsese's The Aviator. Cate Blanchett's Katherine Hepburn seems quite good, but I'd say the jury's still out on Kate Beckinsale's Ava Gardner (and Gwen Stefani's Jean Harlow, who didn't make the cut here.) And is Alec Baldwin channeling his part from Team America?








