Wednesday, February 29, 2012

When Method Voice Acting goes Extreme

New Avengers Trailer!

Monday, February 27, 2012

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Monday, February 13, 2012

Friday, February 10, 2012

The Best Part of the Star Wars prequels...

Stay tuned for the more logical ending as well...


Man from Nowhere

...is now available on Netflix and Hulu! If you liked Taken or Oldboy, see this now. Gotta love Korean revenge cinema. Don't take my word for it, check out Gizmodo's take.



This Is Why You Don't Mess with the Quiet Ones
Andrew Tarantola
Gizmodo.com


Imagine a man with Chuck Norris' tenacity, Jason Bourne's fighting prowess, Vlad the Impaler's viciousness, and Bryan Mills' motivation. That man pales compared to the single-minded destruction factory that is Tae-Sik Cha, a former CIA spook frantically searching for a missing child.

The Man from Nowhere follows Tae-Sik, a special agent turned pawn broker, as he is pulled into the seedy world of organized drug and organ trafficking. He's searching for a young girl and neighbor who's been kidnapped by a vicious gang after her mother had stolen their latest score. Despite his initial reticence, Tae-Sik grows into a John Wayne-caliber hero, rescuing children from servitude—or worse, being sold off piece-by-piece—and systematically dismantling the crime syndicate, as well as its members.

This isn't just some cheap knockoff of Taken. If anything, the reverse is true. Where Taken seemed to jump from plot point to plot point with little regard to consistency or character, The Man From Nowhere offers a masterfully compelling, nuanced story that, despite the ultraviolence, is surprisingly poignant. The acting is genuine—nothing like Alan Rickman's Hans—and the casting is spot-on.

I've been a huge fan of violent crime dramas and action flicks since I was a kid. And I thought I had seen just about every crazy fight scene premise there is to see—including Dae-su Oh bludgeoning his way through a hallway filled with two dozen gang members armed with nothing but a claw hammer (Oldboy, watch it)—but damn was I wrong. Watching Tae-Sik disassemble—literally—eight guys using nothing but a pen knife is simply jaw-dropping. Actually, I think I'll go ahead an put it on right now. [Netflix - Hulu]

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

The Karate Rap

Is this a commentary more on '80s music or Karate?  I'm not sure what to say about this....


Thursday, February 2, 2012