Showing posts with label Timur Bekmambetov. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Timur Bekmambetov. Show all posts

Friday, March 5, 2010

Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter - The movie!



That is one awesome book trailer. Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter is written by Seth Grahame-Smith, author of the best selling Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.

Now it's also to be a movie. Tim Burton just purchased the book, and will be working with his fellow producer from the animated film, 9, Timur Bekmambetov (Wanted). Grahame-Smith will adapt the screenplay from his own book.

Lincoln experienced a lot of tragedy in his life, and Grahame-Smith reimagines that it was all due to vampires. The Axe is Lincoln's weapon of choice, and he hides it in his long coat.

His Zombie book is also to be a movie, with Natalie Portman attached to direct.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Black Lightning Trailer - translated



Timur Bekmembetov is the producer of the upcoming Russian film, Black Lightning about a magical flying Volga car. The film is directed by Alexandr Voitinsky, but you can see Timur's hand all over this. Wanted crossed with Chitty Chitty Bang Bang!
This is a story of Moscow University's student who becomes the owner of ordinary from the first sight, been-used, but... able to fly "Volga" car. With this car he will be able to not only avoid Moscow traffic jams, but unexpectedly for himself turn to city's defender, mysterious fighter against Evil.

Looks very cool!!

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Night Watch - Film Review



Serendipity arrived in my mailbox last week.  I had given up on Netflix ever sending me Nikolaj Coster-Waldau's Danish film Nightwatch, and ordered it from an Amazon Marketplace vendor.  They sent me the wrong movie - Timur Bekmambetov's Russian horror film, Night Watch (Nochnoy dozor), instead.

Being a big fan of Timur's film Wanted, I had Night Watch on my Netflix queue, but buried deep.  I had heard the buzz about Night Watch.  It was the first Russian blockbuster, and made Timur Bekmambetov's reputation as a director.  Amazon refunded my money for the mix up, but I thought I might as well watch the used DVD before I mailed it back. 

Night Watch is the first of a trilogy about the "Others", forces for light and dark who have formed a truce after an epic medieval battle.  The Night Watch patrols and tries to control the dark others (like vampires and witches).  The Day Watch does the same for the light others.  It's an urban fantasy set in modern day Moscow.  It's visually stunning and inventive, just as Timur's work in Wanted is, but here he had to be even more creative on a more limited budget.  It's not the scariest horror vampire film ever, but it has an interesting world, based on a series of Russian novels.  Anton, the main character, we first meet in 1992, when he seeks out a witch to try to get his wife back.  He makes a bargain with her that could tip the balance in the eternal struggle between the light and dark others.  He discovers that he is an "Other" himself when he suddenly can see the witch struggling with members of the Night Watch (dressed as workers for the Moscow Light Company).

You feel like there's all sorts of back story you're not getting, and as Timur says in the commentary, you're only getting the tip of the iceberg, as this is the set up for the trilogy.  I liked that there was mystery about lots of things.  It was intriguing.  Anton is an agent of the Light Others, but he lives across the hall from a family of vampires, and seems to be friends with them.  It's not explained, and obviously is fodder for the future movies.

What I really loved about the film is its innate Russian-ness.  I rewatched the film with Timur's commentary, and there are lots of things that American audiences wouldn't catch.  There is a huge "Vortex" threatening Moscow, and it's shown by swirling huge flocks of crows.  In Russian, the words for "crow" and "vortex" are nearly the same.  The Night Watch uses big yellow utility trucks which evidently are everywhere in Moscow, and are known for being slow and old fashioned.  In the movie, the trucks are practically turbo charged rockets, and one does a complete flip.  Look at this creepy Russian doll made into a spider creature.  In the commentary, Timur said this was a common doll from his childhood.



Is this the best movie ever?  No, but it has a great visual style, and is quite an entertaining film.  Timur said in the commentary that journalists and film critics hated it because they "didn't know where to put it on the shelf".  It's not just genre (horror).  Timur said with a chuckle that he views it as an art house film.  It's very Russian in the settings, and yet you can see all the American film influences.  I felt like it was a Russia I had never seen before -- not all the Kremlin square Cold War spy movie shots we usually get.  It created a sensation in Russia, and some said it was too American, while others said it was too Russian.  The DVD gives you the option of watching in Russian with subtitles or dubbed in English.  Watch the subtitled version, as the subtitles are some of the most inventive I've ever seen.  When a vampire calls to a little boy, the subtitles turn red and dissolve like blood mist.  When one vampire sharply yells, the word explodes in size on the screen.

Timur Bekmambetov made this film for Russian audiences, and never expected it to be seen outside his country.  It ended up being released in theaters all over the world.  This is one DVD worth seeking out.  I give it three stars and a strong recommendation.  I've already added the sequel, Day Watch, to my Netflix queue.  Watch the trailer, below, to get a taste.



And I'm still on my quest for the Danish Nightwatch!

Friday, January 2, 2009

9 Teaser Trailer



This looks really interesting. 9 was a 2005 Oscar nominated short by director Shane Acker, who was part of the Lord of the Rings special effects team. Tim Burton and Timur Bekmambetov (director of Wanted) have teamed up to produce a full length film also named 9, directed by Shane Acker. The animated film has the voice talents of Elijah Wood, Jennifer Connelly, Crispin Glover, Martin Landau, Christopher Plummer, and John C. Reilly.

The film takes place in a world parallel to our own, in which the very legacy of humanity is threatened. A community of fully mobile rag dolls living a post-apocalyptic existence find one of their own, 9 (Wood), displaying leadership qualities that may help them to survive. The conflicted but resilient community includes 1 (Plummer), a domineering war veteran; 2 (Landau), an aged inventor; 5 (Reilly), a stalwart mechanic; 6 (Glover), a visionary and artist; and 7 (Connelly), a brave warrior.

Looks amazing and I am very intrigued after watching the original short film. 9 will be out on 9-9-09!

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Wanted Director Takes On Moby Dick

This could be interesting in Timur's hands:

WANTED Helmer Timur Bekmambetov is to tackle a new movie version of the classic tale of MOBY DICK. Universal Pictures has juist paid a large sum to screenwriting duo Adam Cooper and Bill Collage for their script, which sees their graphic novel-style approach change the classic story structure.

Variety reports that gone is the first-person narration by the young seaman Ishmael, who observes how Ahab's obsession with killing the great white whale overwhelms his good judgment as captain. The trade adds that this change will allow them to depict the whale's decimation of other ships prior to its encounter with Ahab's Pequod, and Ahab will be depicted more as a charismatic leader than a brooding obsessive.

"Our vision isn't your grandfather's Moby Dick," screenwriter Adam Cooper explained. "This is an opportunity to take a timeless classic and capitalize on the advances in visual effects to tell what at its core is an action-adventure revenge story."
Hope it's better than Peter Jackson's King Kong. Timur, please don't hire Jack Black. Love him, just not in the action pics, and he's no Ahab!