Posted Jul 14th 2008 12:45PM by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Disney, Family Films, Trailers and Clips
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As I posted
last week, the trailer for
High School Musical 3: Senior Year was scheduled to hit Disney yesterday, and it did. You can check it out big or small and shnazzy over at
Disney.com, but since it's location-locked, I'm including the YouTube video of the premiere after the jump -- and make sure you head on over to Moviefone to
see their exclusive photos (including the one above) from the film.
Now it's mostly what you'd figure -- the perfect-looking kids singing pop songs while dealing with the woes of big-screen high school. In this case, it's basketball and lots of romance, but there's also some
Footloose flavor in there. Well, that's what I'm assuming since the trailer shows some clips of Zac Efron dancing about in a plaid shirt and a white tee in an industrial yard. But seeing that he takes that look into the classroom -- is plaid back in style?!
The kids finally get to graduate this October 24.
Continue reading Yay! 'High School Musical 3: Senior Year' Gets a Trailer and New Images!
Posted Jul 10th 2008 5:35PM by Jessica Barnes
Filed under: Comedy, Music & Musicals, Deals, Disney

Okay, Will Ferrell has nothing to do with the following production news, but when I think male cheerleaders, I think 'Spartans' -- so sue me. While Ferrell is hardly the most dignified symbol of male cheerleaders everywhere, it's not like a Disney dance comedy is going to do much to raise their profile either.
Variety reports that
Adam Shankman (the musical producer extraordinaire and part-time judge on
So You Think You Can Dance) has signed with Disney to produce the male cheerleader comedy,
Matadors.
The pitch was written by
Mike Bender (
Not Another Teen Movie) and is based on the true story of the all-male dance group that performs at home games for The Chicago Bulls. Never heard of them? Don't feel bad, neither had I. But then again, my cheerleader knowledge is limited to what I've learned from watching
Bring it On.
Former Laker Girl
Anne Fletcher has already signed to direct; Fletcher also worked with Shankman as a choreographer on the dance flick
Step-Up back in 2006. According to
Variety, the film will primarily be a comedy, but it "will feature extensive dance numbers, drawing on Fletcher's experience as a choreographer."
Matadors has not started casting yet, but Fletcher
told The Hollywood Reporter, "It's an array of guys, with all sorts of shapes and sizes. We'll be able to have fun with the casting." Well, what do you know? Maybe there's a part for Ferrell in
Matadors after all.
Who would you like to see shaking their pom poms for Shankman and company? Sound off below ...
Posted Jul 9th 2008 4:03PM by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Music & Musicals, Disney, Fandom, Family Films, Trailers and Clips

Sorry,
High School Musical fans -- the trailer isn't attached to this post, but I can tell you when you can lay your eyes on the singing school extravaganza.
Coming Soon has thrown up a Disney press release for
High School Musical 3: Senior Year. You won't have to go see some random movie to get a peek. Instead, you just have to lean back and relax in front of your television. The first look at the trailer will air on July 13, at 7:55 P.M. ET/PT, preceding an encore of
Camp Rock. (Note: A bunch of other countries with Disney will get this as well -- Canada, Japan, UK, Australia, etc.) And there won't be a long wait before it hits the net -- Disney.com will start showing it 12:01 A.M. ET.
Oh, but there's more!
Zac Efron and
Vanessa Hudgens will host the trailer, and include the song "Now or Never," which will be up on Radio Disney tomorrow.
And for those of you who groan at this news: beware! The teenyboppers will descend upon movie theaters to see this puppy on October 24.
Posted Jul 7th 2008 5:32PM by Elisabeth Rappe
Filed under: Action, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Mystery & Suspense, Disney, Newsstand, Images
The Milford Daily News is hosting
some spy photos from the set of
Bruce Willis' sci-fi thriller
The Surrogates -- and suddenly, it just became a whole lot more interesting.
The Surrogates is set in a future where every human has a robotic surrogate that lives their public life for them, while they remain tucked away in their homes. Willis plays a cop who is forced to leave his home to investigate a series of robot murders. It's based on Robert Vendetti's graphic novel of the same name, and while the graphic sounded interesting, the movie sounded a bit bland, a repeat of
I, Robot. But presumably, the above photo is one of the murders, which suggests it's keeping the fanatical elements of the book. If this is an indication of how nightmarish and gruesome the film will go, I'm intrigued. What about you?
[via
io9]
Posted Jul 5th 2008 1:32PM by Jessica Barnes
Filed under: Classics, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Casting, Disney, RumorMonger

Before we get started, I just want to make it clear that in Hollywood nothing is ever official until you see the press release (and you should probably take the following news with a big grain of salt). Over at the Alice in Wonderland fan site,
talk has surfaced that
Tim Burton has finally cast Alice in his live-action version of
Alice in Wonderland (not to be confused with the
long-suffering American McGee creation).
According to the commenter, Ian B: "My brother is working on the movie and he said Alice has been cast. He is a music supervisor for the movie and said there will be a press release about it on July 9th. The role was originally supposed to be Evan Rachel Woods but she backed out. Alice won't be played by a child but a 23 year old. From what I was told it's her first Burton movie, and her first big role in a film that will be released world wide." So who's the lucky gal? Say hello to
Ryan Nikole Parker. Parker is not very well known, and other than a few TV credits is a relative newcomer to the business.
Burton struck
the deal for
Alice with Disney back in November, and according to comments on the IMDB
message boards, he's already finished casting. Luckily for us, July 9th isn't that far away, so we won't be waiting long for the official word.
Sound off below on who you would like to see go down the rabbit hole with Mr. Burton.
[via
The Bad and Ugly]
Posted Jul 2nd 2008 3:02PM by Eric D. Snider
Filed under: Animation, New Releases, Disney, Fandom

This one's a little heartwarming, folks, especially if you're predisposed (as I am) to admiring pretty much everything about the Pixar company.
Last fall, a young woman named Courtney saw the
WALL-E teaser -- the
one where Andrew Stanton talks about the meeting in 1994 where the story was first conceived -- and was reduced to a puddle of tears by its adorableness. Seems she has a soft spot for robots, and in particular for lonely, child-like, wide-eyed robots. So she videoed herself watching the trailer on her computer, knowing it would have the same effect on her again, and then she posted the video on her
blog and on
YouTube. (We've got it here after the jump.)
The video made its way around the Internets, as these things do, and Courtney began to get e-mails from people within the Pixar family who had seen it and appreciated her enthusiasm. Then one of the film's producers sent her a Pixar jacket as a Christmas gift, along with a note thanking her for the video.
And then they invited her to the film's wrap party in San Francisco.
Continue reading Pixar Honors the Girl Who Cried at the 'WALL-E' Teaser
Posted Jun 30th 2008 1:02PM by Eugene Novikov
Filed under: Animation, New Releases, Disney, Distribution, Movie Marketing, Fan Rant

The media is playing two pointless games of "gotcha" with Pixar's wonderful
Wall-E at the moment. Eric Kohn addressed the first -- conservative critics griping about the film's "left-wing" message --
over here. The other, best articulated in
this post by CHUD's Devin Faraci and
this mind-boggling missive from the
New York Post's Kyle Smith, but also showing up in Todd McCarthy's
Variety review, is that
Wall-E's supposed anti-consumerist bent is "hypocrisy" on account of it's released by Disney. I think that's a stupid and dishonest argument, and here's why.
In its latter half,
Wall-E presents a vision of the future in which humanity is fat, lazy, basically immobile but for their hoverchairs, and in thrall to a mega-corporation called Buy 'N Large that tells everyone what to do, what to think, and what to buy. The rest of the film is dedicated to Wall-E, EVE, and the spaceship Axiom's human population defying the corporation and returning back to Earth to recolonize. This is disingenuous, the thinking goes, because the Disney empire bears more than a few similarities to Buy 'N Large and, in fact, cynically counts on unthinking, overweight masses, to see its movies, buy its merchandise, and ride the rides at Disney World.
What you'll notice from the folks making this argument is a coy ambiguity about who exactly is being hypocritical here. If the claim is that
Disney is being hypocritical by
releasing Wall-E, then that may well be right -- but it's also not surprising, newsworthy, or even worth mentioning. Is anyone really shocked that a large, profit-seeking corporation is being opportunistic and ideologically inconsistent? Where is all the outrage about Disney flicks that push the individuality and non-conformism message, when the Walt Disney Company is dependent on a herd mentality among its consumers?
Continue reading Fan Rant: Why 'Wall-E' Isn't "Hypocritical"
Posted Jun 27th 2008 11:02AM by Elisabeth Rappe
Filed under: Animation, Comedy, Disney, Celebrities and Controversy, Family Films, Movie Marketing, Trailers and Clips
Empire has the exclusive premiere of the U.S. trailer for Disney's newest animated (and 3-D!) feature,
Bolt. You'll have to click over there to see it, but remember to hurry back and tell us what you thought.
Bolt is the story of a four-legged television star who believes his daring escapades are real. But when he finds himself lost in New York City, he has to recognize his ordinariness and find his way home. According to the magazine, early footage is reminiscent of
Toy Story, which intrigues me more than the trailer actually does. Don't get me wrong, it's a cute trailer, but it has that standard Disney feel with the sarcastic sidekicks and obvious jokes. But I do love that hamster -- he sells me on it! He's adorable, and brings back happy memories of my childhood hamsters who also used their rollerballs for violent stunts.
Continue reading The Trailer for Disney's 'Bolt' Races Online
Posted Jun 27th 2008 8:52AM by James Rocchi
Filed under: Animation, Disney, Theatrical Reviews, Family Films

" ... and some Hunter may express
Wonder like ours, when thro' the wilderness
Where London stood, holding the Wolf in chace,
He meets some fragments huge, and stops to guess
What powerful but unrecorded race
Once dwelt in that annihilated place."
-- Horace Smith,
OzymandiasWALL-E, from Pixar studios, shows us a ruined city, centuries from now, where a single (and singular) robot toils to cube trash and, it seems, will never lack for work. WALL-E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter (Earth-Class)), a two-treaded solitary worker robot, spends his days cubing trash and his nights shut in safe from the cataclysmic garbage-gales that sweep the planet, inside a repair truck he's filled with things that have fascinated him; garden gnomes, butane lighters, a copy of
Hello, Dolly! And in
WALL-E's nearly-silent opening minutes, we get a sense of the world he lives in. Everything is ruined; there are no signs of life but for cockroaches; the only voices you hear come when the motion-activated Buy 'n' Large holo-billboards go off. WALL-E strips his broken-down brethren for parts and recharges by the sun's rays and stacks trash-cubes to imitate the skyscrapers decaying all around him, garbage as a pale reflection of glory.
Continue reading Review: WALL-E -- James's Take
Posted Jun 25th 2008 10:02PM by Erik Davis
Filed under: Animation, New Releases, Disney, Theatrical Reviews, New in Theaters, Family Films
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It's hundreds of years from now, practically no life (save for a cockroach) remains on the giant garbage dump that's become Earth, and, funnily enough, the only remaining sign of humanity can be found inside the planet's last functional robot: a trash collector (and compactor) named WALL·E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class). It's been roughly 700 years since humans last populated Earth, and in that time WALL·E has wasted away doing what he was originally programmed for: collect, compact and pile trash so that it's out of the way.
However, over the years WALL·E has managed to develop a bit of OCD, collecting certain items and methodically storing them in the large metal container he calls home. One day, while out searching for more trash (and knickknacks), a spaceship arrives to drop off another robot -- one whose mission it is to scour the area and search for life. And it's a girl ... named EVE (Extra-terrestrial Vegetation Evaluator).
Thus begins what is perhaps Pixar's most romantic film yet -- a beautiful sci-fi tale complete with all the feel-good vibes and fantastic, cutting-edge visuals we've come to expect from a film wearing the Pixar name. Despite a few small bumps in the galaxy, WALL·E can easily claim a spot up top on a list featuring the best films of the year so far, and it will surely go down as one of Pixar's most memorable -- because it's also one of their most personal.
Continue reading Review: WALL·E
Posted Jun 25th 2008 7:32PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Animation, Casting, Disney

Two weeks ago, we learned that
Paul Newman has lung cancer (or
may have lung cancer). And my first reaction was: will he still be able to do
A Walk in the Woods with Robert Redford? Or whatever
that long-ago confirmed final film is, if not that Bill Bryson adaptation? A couple years back the Oscar-winning actor
said he's retiring after one "last hurrah," and it was speculated that he'd be re-teaming with Redford (his partner in both
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and
The Sting). Unfortunately, the
last we heard about
A Walk in the Woods, there was no mention of Newman being involved.
Over at MTV Movies Blog, meanwhile, Shawn Adler's first thought was more like: "Is
Cars really going to be his last acting role?" And thanks to MTV News, he somewhat received the answer. Apparently, the fine folks at Pixar (who are releasing their latest,
Wall-E, this Friday) are including Newman's character, "Doc Hudson", in the script for
Cars 2, which is set to hit theaters in 2012.
Cars co-writer/director
John Lasseter says they're "just waiting to see" if Newman will be able to reprise the role. If Newman can't do it, though, the sequel will be doubly sad, since it will also be missing
Joe Ranft, who co-wrote, co-directed and voiced two characters in the first movie. The longtime Pixar collaborator died tragically in a car accident the year before
Cars came out.
Would you still want Doc to appear in
Cars 2 if not voiced by Newman?
Posted Jun 20th 2008 10:02AM by Elisabeth Rappe
Filed under: Animation, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Disney, Family Films, Movie Marketing, Trailers and Clips
Wall·E clips have been hitting the Internet about every two seconds in the past two weeks. I haven't watched a single one of them, because I don't want to see a second more of this movie until the lights go down in the theatre. But I couldn't resist watching, and posting, this new trailer from
IGN. If you do not want to see even five seconds of new footage, avoid it, but it doesn't feel too spoiler-ish of a trailer. Instead, it is a wicked spoof of every post-apocalyptic trailer made in the last ten years, but it casts our cute robots as action heroes. Or at least Eve is -- that is one tough girl! There is a bit of "Princess Leia on the Death Star" about her.
I'm not sure if this movie is actually as explosion packed as the trailer implies, or if it is just edited really well. Clearly, someone at Pixar is having way too much fun.
Wall*E opens June 27th.
Posted Jun 13th 2008 11:02AM by William Goss
Filed under: Comedy, Romance, Disney, Warner Brothers, Family Films
In theory, those who write about film are supposed to enter a movie without any pre-conceived notions or bias and proceed to give it a fair shake. However, it becomes exceedingly difficult for one not to eye with suspicion the looming threat of a Raja Gosnell-helmed talking animal bonanza and consequently find their sense of reason rendered stone-cold ...
... which is why it pleases me to report that we as a society have staved off the likes of Beverly Hills Chihuahua for a whole week, as the Disney flick has officially been bumped back from September 26th to October 3rd. Just in case you good readers find this all a mite irrational, might I direct you toward Weinberg's deservedly righteous rant whilst I again praise the heavens for allowing us poor souls an additional seven days with which to gird our loins against the potential awfulness of this film.
In related news, the Richard Gere/Diane Lane romance Nights in Rodanthe has followed an inverse path, moving itself up from October 3rd to September 26th. If October informally qualifies as the month for horror, then thank goodness my Halloween is getting off to just as frightening a start as the prospect of sitting through a Nicholas Sparks adaptation.
[Mercy in the grand scheme of things courtesy of Box Office Mojo.]
Posted Jun 12th 2008 8:00PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Disney, Movie Marketing, War, Trailers and Clips

After the whole
Spike Lee vs. Clint Eastwood kerfuffle, it's great to finally see a glimpse of Lee's new World War II movie,
Miracle at St. Anna. The trailer for the film has just shown up
on Yahoo! and it looks just as great as I'd hoped it would. Of course, it's difficult to tell the quality of a war movie based on its trailer -- war movies from Hollywood typically all look the same at the marketing stage -- but I have a strong feeling this will at the very least be one of the more interesting war movies we've seen in some time. Coming from the unique perspective of Lee, we're hopefully bound for some things we haven't even seen before.
I like that the trailer begins in a bank that kinda resembles the one from Lee's previous feature,
Inside Man. And that it takes a moment to reveal that it's a war movie. I guess now that we see
Joseph Gordon-Levitt's role more clearly (he's not even listed on the film's IMDb page), it seems as though
St. Anna may involve more of a present story than I had expected. Perhaps his interview with the main character, Hector (
Laz Alonso), will be interwoven with the story, like the interrogation sequences of
Inside Man? Nah, Lee would never repeat himself so blatantly, would he?
The Miracle of St. Anna marches into theaters September 26.
Posted Jun 11th 2008 2:32PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Animation, Disney, Family Films, Home Entertainment

It seems most TV series can be watched online for free now, so why not also stream episodes of a program like ABC's
Wonderful World of Disney? Sure each episode is actually a feature-length Disney-made film, but a TV show is a TV show. Fortunately, Disney seems to agree, as they're putting this summer's crop of
WWoD films online for free. Typical of Disney, though, and unlike ABC.com's library of episodes, each film will only be available for a limited time. Basically, each title will screen on ABC on Saturday night, then it will be up on Disney.com (specifically
the WWoD page) the following week, from Monday through Friday only. Currently,
Finding Nemo, which appeared on
WWoD June 7, is being offered.
Other movies on the schedule this summer include
Monsters Inc.,
Freaky Friday,
The Haunted Mansion,
Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen and
The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement.
Peter Pan will be the last to air and then stream, during the first week of August.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, the one movie making its world premiere on the program,
Camp Rock, will also (or is it only?) stream for 24 hours on June 23,
on a separate page, after airing a few times on ABC and ABC Family the weekend prior.
Continue reading Disney Movies Streaming Free Online
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