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Tag: die

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Die Hard 5 gets an official release date & name

Source: The Reel Scoop So this news is a couple of days old, but no matter, the next Die Hard in the franchise, aptly named, "A Good Day To Die Hard" has been given an official release date of February 14th, 2013. Here's the synopsis from 20th Century Fox: Since the first Die Hard in 1988, John McClane has found himself in the wrong place at the wrong time, with the skills and attitude to always be the last man standing, making him enemy #1 for terrorists the world over. Now, McClane faces his greatest challenge ever, this time on an international stage, when his estranged son Jack is caught up in the daring prison escape of a rogue Russian leader, and father and son McClane must work together to keep each other alive and keep the world safe for democracy. It'll be good to see Willis back to playing McClane, to be honest though, Die Hard 4.0/Live Free or Die Hard wasn't exactly the best film in the franchise.
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OMG!! The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 (2011) Teaser

OMG OMG OMG.  
Sigh.
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Final Destination 5 (2011) trailer

There's only so many times you can do the same film, and there's only so many times it can be entertaining. After the third, well, the second, it kind of got stale. That's not to say it wasn't completely bad, it still had some entertainment value in it, but we'll see how this one pans out.
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Kazed
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Cop Out (2010) review

Synopsis: A comedy about a veteran NYPD cop whose rare baseball card is stolen. Since it's his only hope to pay for his daughter's upcoming wedding, he recruits his partner to track down the thief, a memorabilia-obsessed gangster. Being the first film Kevin Smith has Directed but hasn't actually written, but was equally awesome as his past Directorial feats. Having gone through some problems with the original name "A Couple of Dicks", Kevin Smith once again had trouble with the freakin' MPAA because the name of his film 'offended' people. Anyways, the film. Bruce Willis and Tracy Morgan were both funny as hell, and the characters they portrayed suited them so well, Willis playing the hard-ass cop and Morgan playing the sidekick who seems to mess things up but then making them better by his fluke-ish approach to cop work. There were some pretty cool action moments in the film, and this was all balanced out by an acceptable story, nothing to write home about, but reminded me more of a Miami Vice episode. Funny, action filled film with some pretty cool moments which made this film a keeper for me. 6/10 Kazed.
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The Wave review

Synopsis -
Spoiler Inside SelectShow
When I was first told about this German film I was a little dubious. It wasn't that the premise of a high school social experiment that soon gets out of control was not appealing, but I had a feeling that if it wasn't done well then it simply wouldn't work. I had visions of a cold, stripped-down documentary-style format that would leave me disengaged and unable to form any kind of emotional attachment. Luckily, I was in for a big surprise as this turned out to be a complete gem of a movie that was not only entertaining and full of suspense but also had a powerful message behind it. The 2008 film (Die Welle in its original German) loosely retells and, albeit heavily, dramatises an actual experiment called "The Third Wave", which was carried out in a California high school in the 1960s and used to teach the pupils about the dangers of an autocratic government. By moving the action to modern-day Germany, these warnings are put in a far more relevant context and the question of history repeating is put at the forefront. In what I feel was a brave move, the film openly discusses the impact of the Third Reich on Germany's youth of today, and their jaded attitudes towards a culture and education system that feels the need to constantly remind them of the atrocities committed during Nazi rule. The teenagers' gradual shift from apathy and cynicism to passion and enthusiasm towards "The Wave" - the autocratic movement instigated by teacher Rainer Wenger (Jürgen Vogel) - is worrying to watch, yet unsettlingly believable. We are presented with a classroom full of outsiders, each lonely in their own way, slowly coming together to form something they feel is great, without seeing the damage it is causing to those outside of it. Vogel really shines as Herr Wenger, who leaves us constantly questioning his own attitudes to The Wave as someone who is supposed to be in control of the 'experiment'. In one of the final scenes he is absolutely fantastic and bears more than a slight resemblance to history's arguably most famous German (well, Austrian if we're being picky) son when he makes an inspired speech to his student subjects. The teenage leads deserve a mentioning too, with Max Riemelt and Jennifer Ulrich both putting in strong performances as the high school sweethearts, Marco and Karo, torn apart by the movement. However it is Frederick Lau's portrayal of class misfit Tim Stoltefuss that really carries us towards the climax. I'll admit that at times, he is a little 'pantomime weirdo', but he just pulls it off so well that I'm willing to let him off. With regard to the finale, it was a little predictable and overdramatic (no such events happened in the real experiment in California), but I felt it was fitting and I saw no other way it could have ended. If we had been left with anything different I'm sure we would have been left feeling rather empty and unsatisfied. For those of you who tend to avoid foreign language films and generally stick to more mainstream stuff, I couldn't stress more that you should give this film a chance. There's already talks of a Hollywood remake, which is no surprise to me at all. I can see it being either reproduced in a The Faculty-esque pretty-boys-and-girls-in-trouble teen drama, or alternatively it would easily lend itself to a gritty British urban youth drama (see Kidulthood). Either way, this film holds a powerful and stark warning that is relevant both on the continent, over here and on the other side of the Atlantic. It opens up the unthought of possibility that Germany could allow itself to slip back into a dictatorship, and if it is possible there then the idea of it happening closer to home should maybe not be dismissed so easily. In a country where some are so disillusioned by the current state of affairs that they elect a racist party to represent us in Europe the lesson within this film couldn't be any more applicable. 8/10 Steve
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