Archive for July, 2006

Sylvester Stallone on Rambo IV

Jul 31st, 2006 Posted in movies | Comments Off

Source: Entertainment Weekly

Entertainment Weekly got an update from Rocky Balboa writer-director-exec. producer-star Sylvester Stallone about the fourth “Rambo” installment. While the film doesn’t have a domestic distributor yet, Rambo IV is expected to start filming October 1 in Thailand, says the magazine.

Stallone said he called Soldier of Fortune magazine to get their opinion on who Rambo should face next and asked, “‘What is the most critical man-doing-inhumanity-to-man situation right now in the world? Where is it?’” The answer was Burma.

He has written a first draft of the script with Art Monterastelli (The Hunted), which finds Rambo living a monastic lifestyle in Bangkok and salvaging old PT boats and tanks for scrap metal. When a group of volunteers bringing supplies into Burma disappears, a relative of one of the missing missionaries begs Rambo to find them.

Rambo then heads off with a team of young guns to find the relative.

Kidman the Villain in The Golden Compass

Jul 31st, 2006 Posted in comics, movies, sci-fi | Comments Off

Source: Variety

Nicole Kidman will star in New Line Cinema’s The Golden Compass, playing the villainous and glamorous Mrs. Coulter, reports Variety.

Shooting on the $150 million production, based on the first part of Phillip Pullman’s “His Dark Materials” trilogy, is set for September at London’s Shepperton Studios.

Chris Weitz is directing from his own script. British newcomer Dakota Blue Richards has already been cast for the lead role of Lyra Belacqua, who travels to a parallel universe to battle the forces of evil and rescue her best friend.

Scholastic Media’s Deborah Forte is producing with Bill Carraro. New Line is eyeing a November 16, 2007 release date.

Actor Mel Gibson arrested in Malibu

Jul 31st, 2006 Posted in movies, press | Comments Off

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Actor and director Mel Gibson was arrested in Malibu early on Friday and released on bail, according to police, in what media reports said was a case of driving under the influence.

A Web site for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said Gibson, 50, was taken into custody at 2:36 a.m. PDT (5:36 a.m. EDT) and booked less than two hours later. It listed his bail amount at $5,000.

The celebrity Web site TMZ.com reported the arrest was for driving under the influence after a Breathalyzer was administered.

A spokesman for the sheriff’s department could not immediately be reached for comment. Gibson’s publicist also could not be reached.

Read the Reuters story here
Read the TMZ.com story here

More From Favreau on Iron Man

Jul 31st, 2006 Posted in comics, movies | Comments Off

Source: Advanced Dark

‘Advanced Dark’ pointed us to this post on the SHH! Boards where Iron Man director Jon Favreau’s posts from his official movie Blog have been posted. He addresses the Tom Cruise rumor and shares a few more details on the story and villain.

You can check it out here.

E3 game trade show not cancelled, but will be downsized

Jul 31st, 2006 Posted in entertainment, games | Comments Off

Ars Technica: Contrary to reports across the web, E3 has not been cancelled. Next-Gen had hoped that they would blow the lid off of a hot story by revealing that the show had been cancelled, but some quick fact checking shows that they are simply incorrect.

Sources close to the Entertainment Software Association (ESA) tell Ars Technica that the show can and will go on, but that big changes are planned. The “Electronic Entertainment Expo” (hence E3) started in 1995 as a small but interesting annual convention for gaming, following roughly six months after the once-popular annual COMDEX computer trade-show in Las Vegas. The show has grown immensely in popularity, and that appears to be the problem.

Sources say that two major factors have led to the decision to transition the show to a more “closed-door” event. Both, coincidentally, were major reasons for COMDEX shutting down: cost and access. If you’ve never been to E3, let me describe it like this: long lines, truckloads of people, video games everywhere, and really fancy “booths” (where booth sometimes means basketball court-sized display area). As with COMDEX, the major players are reportedly tired of how much it costs to put on the dog and pony show. Turns out it costs millions of dollars to put the sparkle into an E3 blingfest.

Now in theory, these shows are primarily geared towards connecting businesspeople. To that end, E3 was (again, in theory) only open to industry folks and journalists. In recent years, however, the number of people attending have skyrocketed, in part because E3 registration was a moderately open process. The show was getting huge, and just as with COMDEX, the show-within-a-show was born. What I mean by that is that it was no longer enough to go to the show. To talk to someone who actually knew what they were talking about, you’d need an appointment. To see something really special, really worth writing about, you’d need to meet behind closed doors. To find out anything of interest about something that wasn’t on a placard, you needed to get in with the right people. With COMDEX the practice started to get ridiculous; major players officially skipped the show but set up camp in Vegas hotels and had their sideshows for a fraction of the cost.

One source I spoke with told me that media access is indeed a problem, but it probably does not factor in greatly to the decision to downsize the show. Nevertheless, there are plenty of complaints from insiders about how “blogging” in particular has made the shows more difficult, if only because floor people are instructed to speak only of what they are approved to speak of, lest another half-baked headline make the rounds.

Possibly more influential is the fact that E3 is viewed by some people as being the Sony-Microsoft-Nintendo show, which it is not supposed to be. Smaller players have complained about this before, but really, that’s just the nature of a tradeshow. Not everyone can be Wil Wheaton, can they?

In all seriousness, the days of the big consumer technology trade shows are indeed passing. At the end of the day, the reason is very simple: ten years ago, you needed a big trade show to generate buzz and hype. It used to be that COMDEX was a special event because so much new stuff was unveiled, and this was the only way to see it. Now, however, information comes down the pipe faster than ever, and companies are wondering if there’s really any benefit to spending the big money on displays only to share the floor with other competitors looking to out-wow attendees. It was a media circus for the days when you needed a circus to attract media attention. I don’t think anyone would say that consumer electronics is lacking for attention these days.

Official word from the ESA should be out tomorrow. Keep an eye on Opposable Thumbs for additional updates. We’ll follow-up there.

Steely Dan demands apology from Owen Wilson

Jul 28th, 2006 Posted in entertainment, movies, music | Comments Off

LOS ANGELES – Paging Owen Wilson. Steely Dan wants an apology.

The veteran group behind such jazz-rock hits as “Rikki Don’t Lose that Number” says Wilson ripped off its Grammy-winning tune “Cousin Dupree” for his title role as a slacker in the new comedy “You, Me and Dupree.”

In a 10-paragraph letter posted July 17 on Steely Dan’s Web site, and addressed to Wilson’s brother Luke, band leaders Walter Becker and Donald Fagen asked Owen Wilson to appear at a show in Irvine, Calif., to apologize to the band’s fans.

Wilson, in return, would get Steely Dan merchandise and a chance to party with the group.

“He would have to cop to the fact that what he and his Hollywood gangster pals did was wrong and that he wishes he had never agreed to get involved with this turkey in the first place,” says the pair.

Becker and Fagen claim that “some hack writer or producer” heard Steely Dan’s “Cousin Dupree,” about a hormonal houseguest, and “when it came time to change the character’s name or whatever so people wouldn’t know what a rip the whole thing was, they didn’t even bother to think up a new (expletive) name for the guy!”

They go on to trash the movie (a “summer stinkbomb”) and Wilson.

“Instant karma is a fact, Jack,” the pair writes.

Story Source (AP)

The Fhybrid Scooter: Hydrogen Powered Hybrid Power

Jul 28th, 2006 Posted in scooters | Comments Off

Although it’s currently only a concept, the picture above represents the future. It’s a future where people can travel on scooters and not feel like absolute nerds. Although that’s a lie, this concept may really show the future. It’s a hydrogen powered scooter was designed by an industrial design student from Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands and would have a top speed of 40 mph and a range of about 124 miles on a single tank of hydrogen. In addition to the high-quality H2O, the little two-wheeled spree-wannabe’s Li-ion battery can be charged through regenerative power from the braking of the little FWD scooter. Dunno if it’ll ever be available but we’re sure the enviro crowd would totally pop a huge wheelie over this one if it does.

Story Source

KaZaA Creators Agree To Pay $100+ Million

Jul 28th, 2006 Posted in nerd culture, press, technology, toys | Comments Off

The “verdict” just came in, and it’s going to end up costing the makers of the once wildly popular music downloading service a huge sum of money. Sharman Networks Ltd, the producers of KaZaA, agreed to settle global lawsuits to the tune of $115 million.

The entertainment industry execs are, as always, putting on the face of deeply concerned citizens. The vice chairman for EMI Music made this philanthropic statement: “While the award may seem like a vast pot of money, it will merely offset the millions we have invested — and will continue to invest — in fighting illegal pirate operations around the world and protecting the works that our artists create.”

Read the rest here

Sony Launches PSP Wi-Fi Network in Europe, Australia

Jul 28th, 2006 Posted in games, nerd culture, technology, toys | Comments Off

Tomorrow Sony will be launching PlayStation Spot. This is a network of Wi-Fi hotspots that will allows PSP users to download demos, songs, games, videos and pictures and also play the games with other PSP users. Access to the wireless network itself will be free, but expect to pay out the wazoo for any kind of content. The PlayStation Spots will be placed around game stores in London, Milton Keynes, Bristol, Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds, Glasgow and Edinburgh.

Samsung SCH-a990

Jul 28th, 2006 Posted in nerd culture, press, technology, toys | Comments Off

Camera phones have come a long way over the years, graduating from mediocre VGA lenses to higher-quality megapixel cameras. Though these devices will never replace your stand-alone digital camera, they are getting better, and now Verizon Wireless has scored the first 3.2-megapixel camera phone for the States: the Samsung SCH-A990. It comes with an autofocus feature, video-recording capabilities, and a cool swivel screen. This high-end mobile also has integrated Bluetooth, support for Verizon’s 3G services, and excellent call quality. But it’s not without problems. The phone was sometimes slow to perform multimedia functions in our tests and is marred by restrictions set forth by Verizon. Yet, for those who crave multimedia and the latest features on their phone, the SCH-A990 certainly fits the bill. Just be prepared for a little sticker shock. At $349.99, the SCH-A900 is on the pricey side, though certainly cheaper than the Nokia N80.

Check out the phone’s features here
Check out a rundown of all the reveiws here from are freinds at Gizmodo!