The Year That Was: 2014 in Film

Check out ALL of the PDC end of year lists!

Review: Ava DuVernay's 'Selma'

Starring David Oyelowo

Review: Rob Marshall's 'Into The Woods'

Starring Meryl Streep, Emily Blunt, and Anna Kendrick

Tim Burton's 'Big Eyes'

Starring Christoph Waltz and Amy Adams

Showing posts with label kevin costner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kevin costner. Show all posts

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Review: 'Black or White' starring Kevin Costner and Octavia Spencer


Let's be frank about Mike Binder's interracial dramedy, Black or White; it's absolutely ridiculous in just about every way imaginable. Whether as a vehicle to talk about race relations or as a courtroom film about a tangled custody battle, the film is utterly preposterous and pretty damned insulting. Coming on the heels of a comedy like Dear White People, which used comedy to ask serious and contemporary questions about race, Black or Whiteseems manufactured to show why an alcoholic white man is always better than triflin' ass black people.

Binder's pal Kevin Costner, who he worked with on the enjoyable but heavy-handed The Upside of Anger, stars as lovable drunk Elliot, a powerful but curmudgeonly attorney whose wife (Jennifer Ehle) has just died. That leaves him alone to take care of 8-year-old Eloise (the excellent Jillian Estel), the interracial granddaughter born to his daughter who died in childbirth. The father, Reggie (Andre Holland), is one of those triflin' ass black people; a crackhead who disappeared and has barely been in the girl's life. When he does show up it's usually to ask for money because...well, he's triflin'. Eloise's paternal grandmother Rowena (Octavia Spencer) thinks she should spend time with their side of the family, which is a fair request. She's not so bad, but she runs a bunch of sketchy businesses from her garage and enables Reggie's triflin' ass. So naturally Rowena and Elliot don't get along, and the custody dispute starts to get ugly when she hires her sleazy brother (Anthony Mackie) as the attorney.

On the face of it the whole thing is silly, but it gets worse as Binder puts down every single African-American in the film just to make his point. The depth of Reggie's personal demons unfolds any time Elliot's stability as a guardian comes into question. For instance, Elliot hires Duvan (Mpho Koaho), a dorky African tutor to help with Eloise's studies, but he ends up just being the driver for when he's too drunk to drive. Hardy har har. Elliot's alcoholism is merely a gimmick but is never portrayed as a detriment to his value as a caretaker. Even when he drops the dreaded N-word at one point it's barely an issue. On the other hand, Reggie's drug abuse is just the gateway to deeper issues that rule him out as a father-figure outright. Need him to be a shady grifter? Sure, there's that. Need him to be violent, too? Okay, got it. It wouldn't be so bad if Rowena, or some other character with melanin, had the opportunity to express their side of the debate. There are plenty of natural reasons why Eloise should at least split time with her families, but we never get to hear them. Any time a serious examination of race threatens to break out Binder either hides behind lame jokes (usually involving the super lame Duvan) or ugly stereotypes.

Costner gives a stern but engaging performance, though, and his scenes with Estell are marvelous. She's a real talent, and yes the character is a bit pre-packaged perky, but there's nuance as Eloise begins to play both sides of the family against one another in a bid for attention. In the midst of all their squabbling, the families kind of forget what the fight is really about. And of course, everything leads to a chance for Elliot to give a rousing speech on race, the kind that's supposed to tie up a complicated issue with a neat little bow. What's interesting about it is how frank Elliot gets in explaining his own prejudices, admitting that he recognizes race first. But then he judges people by what they do, and of course that's how it should always be in reality. However, it's only the African-Americans whose actions are in question, and of course they all come to see things as Elliot would have them see it because their opinions don't truly matter.

The worst thing about Black or White is that it's just simplistic enough that people who don't want to think too much about race relations will "get" where it's coming from. They may even think it profound. But it's not. Given the problems with race this country still has to contend with, Black or White isn't just bad it's completely ignorant.
 Rating: 1.5 out of 5

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Kevin Costner Seeks to Inspire in New Trailer for Disney's 'McFarland, USA'



Did you like and enjoy Million Dollar Arm with Jon Hamm? If you did, then Disney's new film (and one very similar to the aforementioned one) McFarland, USA should be right up your alley. Replacing Jon Hamm is Kevin Costner in the role of middle-aged man seeking to help young souls achieve what they think is unachievable a role. In the movie, Costner is a new teacher in a small California town and without any experience of his own, starts a track team that inspires a bunch of Latino kids to dream big. 

The film looks sweet enough, even though we all know it's going to be filled with cheesy moments. Here's hoping that the film is more about the kids running track than about Costner himself, because that would be highly upsetting and too stereotypical for my taste. 

The film opens in theaters February 20, 2015. You can check out the trailer below. 


Wednesday, December 3, 2014

New Trailer for 'Black or White' starring Kevin Costner and Octavia Spencer


Kevin Costner's been attempting to make a comeback over the last couple of years, and while he's been busier than ever most of his films have been duds. So perhaps a good way to rebound is a collaboration with his The Upside of Anger director, Mike Binder, for the racially-charged drama Black or White (formerly Black AND White), and a new trailer arrives weeks before it opens in theaters.

Co-starring Octavia Spencer, Gillian Jacobs, Anthony Mackie, Andre Holland, Jennifer Ehle, and newcomer Jillian Estel, the film centers on the custody battle between a white grandfather and an African-American grandmother over their beloved granddaughter. This one appears to be a well-intentioned crowd pleaser that tackles the race issue in the broadest possible way. Nothing wrong with that, but some of the early talk about it as an awards film (we received screeners for it, surprisingly) seems to be misplaced.

Black or White opens next year on January 30th.


Black or White by Teaser-Trailer.com

Monday, November 3, 2014

Kevin Costner Insipires Cross-Country Runners in the 'McFarland, USA' Trailer



Disney and inspirational sports movies go hand-in-hand like Kevin Costner and sports movies, so what do you get when these two forces come together on one? You get McFarland, USA, the true story of how an unlikely team overcomes the odds to become champions. Cue the sweeping, patriotic music please.

Directed by Niki Caro (Whale Rider), McFarland, USA centers on Jim White, a track coach who arrives at the titular economically-depressed town and helps the Latino cross country team become champions. Of course he has a good deal of adversity to deal with like learning all of their names (they're all named Diaz!!!! *har har har*) and finding common ground with those he has little in common with, but of course he does it because that's what these kinds of cheesy films are all about. So you've got economic hardship, the immigrant story, that whole American Dream "melting pot" thing, and Costner. Audiences tend to eat this stuff up with a spoon so we'll see if they take to McFarland, USA the same way on February 20th 2015.

Friday, September 5, 2014

Kevin Costner and Octavia Spencer Battle for Custody in Trailer for 'Black and White'


Kevin Costner has certainly been keeping busy, starring in Draft Day, Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit, and 3 Days to Kill already in 2014. And yet he's still got one more film on the way in Black and White, a complicated family drama dealing with issues of race and child custody. With the film slated to premiere in Toronto the first trailer has been released.

Reuniting with writer/director Mike Binder (The Upside of Anger), Costner plays the grandfather to his deceased daughter's mixed-race child. Left alone to care for her after his wife's death, he must now deal with the girl's paternal grandmother (Octavia Spencer) who thinks she should stay with the African-American side of the family. While the film does seem to be dealing with racial issues in a mature and reasoned fashion, it also has way too much going on. The girl's father turns out to be a drug addict, with Costner blaming him for his daughter's death. Binder has always had issues cramming too much into his movies and that seems to be the case here, too.

The cast and material are promising, though, so hopefully Black and White's reviews will be solid. [Shadow and Act]

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Kevin Costner is 'Criminal'; Jessica Barth Returns for 'Ted 2'; Mamie Gummer Joins 'Ricki and the Flash'



* Kevin Costner is suddenly busier than ever although that says nothing about the results of all these movies he's starring in lately. Draft Day, Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit, and the wretched Three Days to Kill have all done poorly, but maybe that will change with Costner's next project. He's in talks to star in Criminal, from The Iceman director Ariel Vromen. Costner will play “a ruthless killer who, rather than spend the rest of his life in jail, chooses to be used in a medical experiment in which the brain of a recently murdered field operative is implanted in his head.” Pretty nifty concept that Vromen can hopefully bring to life better than he did with The Iceman. [Variety]

* The chick who fell in love with a talking Teddy bear will be back for Ted 2 as Jessica Barth will reprise her role as trashy cashier, Tami-Lynn. Plot details are few but we know Seth MacFarlane will be back to voice Ted, co-write the script, and direct. Mark Wahlberg is also returning, joined by new addition Amanda Seyfried who will play his new love interest with Mila Kunis taking only a small role this time.

* Mamie Gummer, along with Kevin Kline, will join her mother Meryl Streep in Ricki and the Flash. Directed by Jonathan Demme and written by Diablo Cody, Streep plays "a rock ‘n’ roll-loving woman who chased her dreams at the cost of her family, but gets a chance to put things right." Kline will play Streep's ex-husband while Gummer is their confrontational daughter. [TheWrap]

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Kevin Costner May Direct Disney's 'Electric Boy Genius'


As Kevin Costner has suddenly become a regular presence on the big screen again, admittedly with mixed results thanks to the lackluster performances of Three Days to Kill, Draft Day and Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit, it only makes sense he'd begin to look at his directorial options. Costner hasn't stepped behind the camera since 2003's western, Open Range, but now he's reportedly circling Disney's long-developing inspirational drama, Electric Boy Genius.

Sitting in development limbo for some time, the last update on it came in 2010 when John Lee Hancock (The Blind Side) came aboard to direct the film, based on a 2002 GQ article about teenaged electrical engineering wiz, Ryan Patterson. Patterson had been experimenting with electricity while still in diapers, and picked up the skills he needed by watching his father do wiring work. By the time he was  17, Patterson was already making advanced technological advancements and developing innovations. Doug Wright wrote the most recent draft of the script.

Costner has only directed three films, the biggest of which was Dancing with Wolves, followed by the regrettable post-apocalyptic thriller, The Postman. If this goes through and Costner signs on, maybe we'll see his career start to resemble Clint Eastwood's.  [Tracking Board]

Friday, April 11, 2014

Review: 'Draft Day' Starring Kevin Costner and Jennifer Garner


If there's one actor most closely associated with the sports movie genre, it's Kevin Costner. If there's a guy who has exemplified the middle-aged, lousy in life but king on the field archetype it's him, and he's done it unabashed classics like Bull Durham and Field of Dreams. But even in the underrated golf comedy, Tin Cup, Costner has excelled at this very specific sort of character, which is why it's been so strange to see him away from it for so long. For me at least, it's a role I've sorely missed seeing, but never would I have thought to see it re-emerge in a football dramedy/thriller like Draft Day.

In a sense, all of those earlier Costner films are a form of wish fulfillment. Wish fulfillment for guys, anyway, where the breaks go exactly right on the green or the home run sails over the fence with glorious perfection, all while some gorgeous woman cheers on from the stands. Draft Day kind of follows that same pattern, except replace the stands with an office and the home runs with draft picks. Think the behind-the-scenes insider jargon of Moneyball mixed with the Cleveland woe of Major League, all wrapped in the effortless branding and gigantic egos of the NFL.

Costner proves he's a natural of the gridiron as much as the baseball diamond, playing Cleveland Browns general manager Sonny Weaver, Jr. Sonny's life is in disarray, and it couldn't happen at a worse time. His father, the team's legendary head coach he was forced to fire a couple of seasons ago, has recently passed away. The tension this decision has created with his mother (Ellen Burstyn) is thicker than an offensive tackle; he's been having a secret romance with the team's salary cap analyst, Ali (Jennifer Garner), who has just revealed she's pregnant; and all of this occurs just as the NFL Draft is mere hours away. Coming off a mediocre year plagued by injury, Sonny is basically given an ultimatum by the team owner (Frank Langella) to "make a splash" at the Draft or risk getting canned.

While the life decisions Sonny is forced to make, like choosing whether he even wants to be a father, are familiar and play out with few surprises, it's the wheeling 'n dealing of big time professional football that really moves the chains. It's new ground for Ivan Reitman, the legendary director of many comedy staples in the 1980s, and he overcompensates when trying to capture the frenetic pace and anxiety of NFL war rooms where every decision literally means millions of dollars. Through a combination of 24-style ticking clocks and split screens that would make Jack Bauer throw up his arms in protest, Reitman zips us through the many internal and external factors intruding in on Sonny's decisions. Taking the ultimate gamble, he decides to mortgage the team's future, trading away three future #1 draft picks to secure the top spot right now. Not only does it send ripples through the league, but what should have made his choice easier only gets tougher.

The consensus #1 choice, and would fit the owner's splash-making criteria, is blue chip quarterback Bo Callahan (Josh Pence), a pretty boy with a hot shot agent (P. Diddy, appropriately) and possible character issues. On the other end of the spectrum is the guy Sonny wants, linebacker and tackling machine Vontae Mack (Chadwick Boseman), a natural team leader and a genuinely good guy. There's also the hometown boy, running back Ray Jennings (played by Houston Oilers RB Arian Foster), whose father (Terry Crews) played for the Browns. Choosing Callahan would make the franchise happy, including their arrogant Super Bowl-winning coach (Denis Leary), but is it necessarily the right thing to do?

So yeah, this is one of those alternate realities where things like morals and personal codes of honor intrude in the high-stakes world of NFL decision making. Like that exists! It's often hokey and preachy, frequently serving as a self-aggrandizing advertisement for the NFL and the purity of its wealthy players. When one player, who is destined to make millions even if he drops a few spots, laments how badly his family needs him to be the #1 pick so he can make more, it's a little tough to sympathize with his "plight". But Sonny is a guy you genuinely want to see succeed, and Costner gives him all of the rough edges we've seen in most of his other genre characters. His chemistry with Garner, at her feistiest for the first time in way too long, is playful and a lot of fun until it comes time to make some tough choices. Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones might see a little of himself (okay, a lot) in the performance given by Langella.

But at the same time, Draft Day is an authentic window into the NFL like we've never seen before on the silver screen. There's a certain thrill in actually seeing your team represented as part of the story; their actual team uniforms, logos, stadiums, and players are all there. Even league commissioner Roger Goodell shows up, only to get booed by the Draft's typically rowdy fans. It really does feel like you're being let in on a secret peek behind the curtain, or sitting right there at Radio City Music Hall. While Draft Dayis hardly a Super Bowl champ, NFL fans aching for some football will want to run and check it out.

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Review: '3 Days to Kill' Starring Kevin Costner, Amber Heard, and Hailee Steinfeld


If there's one thing McG and Luc Besson will never be recognized for, it's subtlety. Hot babes, fast cars, shoot outs, and questionable attempts at humor are what they traffic in. It wasn't always that way for Besson, director of genre classics like The Professional and La Femme Nikita, but now he produces artificial popcorn flavoring like The Transporter and Taken. But there's something endearing about Besson's sloppy Euro-action movies, and for all its many....oh so many flaws...3 Days to Kill is sort of enjoyable for the performances within.

And by performances I mean a Kevin Costner who seems totally perplexed by the strange comedy-espionage world he's stumbled into, and Amber Heard vamping it up in a variety of skin tight outfits (and odd locales) that are worth the price of admission alone. It's not fair to say that Besson tosses Costner into the Taken blender because 3 Days to Kill is only partly an action movie; the good majority of it resembles a sitcom where the clueless dad tries to reconnect with his rebellious teen. It makes for a strange brew, and one that's too ridiculous to be boring.

Costner, with his unkempt beard and collection of scarfs plays Ethan, a CIA operative who has grown tired of the job. After a run-in with the ludicrously-named, but also sort of awesome villain known as The Albino goes belly-up when Ethan passes out, he's diagnosed with terminal brain cancer. With only months left to live, he decides to hang up his gun and reconnect with his ex-wife (Connie Nielsen) and estranged daughter Zoey (Hailee Steinfeld), who are now living in Paris. The wife never liked his job, and Zoey has no clue about it, but just as Ethan is starting to get comfortable he's roped back into business by an oversexed honeypot named Vivi (Heard). He refuses, even somehow shaking her flirtatious charms...

"You're not my type", he says.

"I'm everybody's type", she comes back.

She's not wrong, but it takes the offer of an experimental cure to get Ethan back for one last murder mission, taking out an arms dealer named The Wolf. The cure causes Ethan to black out at inconvenient moments, like every time he's about to nab the bad guy. But what makes him even more delirious is the presence of an African family of squatters who have taken over his home randomly. The youngest son is always trying to give him high-fives, which Ethan is WAY too cool for. In an effort to make good with Zoey he buys a purple bike nobody wants to ride, and then there's the issue of her dating and having hair troubles and the big dance is coming up and what is a trained killer to do!?!? Why not torture some sage parenting advice out of the guys he's been hired to beat up? An unfortunate Italian accountant is forced to give up his recipe for marinara or face further brutality; while another insider (Marc Androni) keeps getting phone calls from Ethan on how to raise a daughter. Speaking of phones, Zoey sets Icona Pop's "I Don't Care" as Ethan's ringtone and it goes off at the worst times imaginable. Stealth apparently isn't in his job description.

It's over-the-top and nonsensical but Besson and co-writer Adi Hasak know exactly what they're doing. Some of the jokes about "cowboy" Americans and France's silly governmental system are lifted from Besson's old playbook (they can be heard in The Familymost recently), and McG directs with his usual emphasis on action rather than emotion. Costner fits comfortably as a bad ass despite his weathered, beaten body, which only makes his bewilderment during the sentimental moments all the more believable. The film does veer a little too heavily into schmaltz, especially when Ethan starts offering up dance lessons and teaching Zoey how to ride a bike. The mix of humor and violence isn't always on-point, and the tone is more than a little disorienting. Hardly one of Besson's best but far from his worst (ever seen Wasabi? Or From Paris with Love?), 3 Days to Kill is entertaining enough, ironically, for those with some time to kill.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

*CLOSED* '3 Days to Kill' Advance Screening


In the pulse-pounding spy thriller 3 Days to Kill, Kevin Costner is an international agent with a terminal illness who agrees to take one last job in hopes of finding a cure. Directed by McG and co-starring Amber Heard and Hailee Steinfeld, the film opens on February 21st, but we're offering you a chance to see it early by attending a free advance screening.

The screening takes place at AMC Georgetown on Wednesday, February 19th at 7:00pm. To qualify, you MUST be a fan of Punch Drunk Critics on Facebook,so if you haven't "Liked" us yet please go there and do so now. To enter, simply email punchdrunkcritics@yahoo.com with your name, contact email address, and favorite Kevin Costner movie. Winners will be selected on Monday, February 17th with a pass good for two to attend.

Good luck!


3 Days To Kill (2014) Movie Trailer by Dread Central

Thursday, January 30, 2014

New Trailer for '3 Days to Kill' Starring Kevin Costner and Amber Heard


So the last time we saw Kevin Costner in the realm of secret agents and espionage didn't work out so well, with Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit tanking and probably ruining any hope for a Costner-led spinoff. But maybe he'll find better success with 3 Days to Kill, an action-thriller spawned by the unholy union of writer/producer Luc Besson and director McG. Basically, expect lots of old dudes kicking ass while buxom babes (Amber Heard, in this case) hang off their arms and explosions go off randomly in the background.

A new trailer for the film is online, and it actually doesn't look too bad minus all the sentimental hokum. Costner plays a former agent with a terminal disease, who takes one last mission in the hopes of finding a cure. Meanwhile he's also trying to reconnect with his estranged daughter, played by Hailee Steinfeld.

3 Days to Kill opens February 21st.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Review: 'Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit', Starring Chris Pine, Kevin Costner, and Keira Knightley


Kevin Costner was courted to play Jack Ryan way back in The Hunt for Red October, the first film starring Tom Clancy's analyst. We all know how that story goes though, since they cast Alec Baldwin for the role instead because Costner was busy with Dances With Wolves. Ironically enough, Costner finally gets to be in a Jack Ryan movie, albeit not playing the title character himself. 

Kenneth Branagh brings us the reboot of the franchise with a little bit into Jack's background, a little bit of action, a little bit of suspense, and nothing that is ultimately memorable or new to fans of Ryan's stories except for the more modern global economy and readjustments to geopolitics.


Jack (Chris Pine) is an economics student working on his PhD. in London when 9/11 happens. Eighteen months later, he's a marine and flying with two others over Afghanistan when his helicopter is shot down. Ryan sustains a back injury that leaves him recovering and in physical therapy for eight months. It's there that he meets Cathy Muller (Keira Knightley), a med student studying to be an eye doctor, but is helping Jack get through physical therapy in order to complete her credits. It's there where he also meets William Harper (Kevin Costner), a man who works for the CIA and has read Jack's dissertation and other writings about economics, geopolitics, and whatnot. He convinces Jack to go to work for the CIA as a spy compliance officer on Wall Street, but only after he finishes his PhD. 

Ten years later, Jack is where you expect him to be after his conversation with Harper. There, he uncovers some shady information about stocks and Russia and other financial and economic things that I can't begin to explain to you in any competency. Basically, a man named Victor Cherevin (Kenneth Branagh) intends to crush the U.S. dollar after staging a terrorist attack to bring down the U.S. economy. To try and get more information, Harper sends Jack to Russia to meet with Cherevin, but things get complicated when they try to have Jack killed because they suspect he knows about their plot and when Cathy, now his fiancĂ©, shows up in Moscow because she suspects Jack is having an affair. 


The movie's faults don't lie with the cast so much as it does with the script, which has a decent build up, but kind of crashes its way to its finale with a bad guy who's too wooden in motive and personality to really ramp up the stakes. That's not to say that there aren't good suspenseful moments in the film. Because, if anything, Kenneth Branagh can play creepy and threatening pretty well, but there are too many layers missing for it to be credible. 

A lot of people hold Jack Ryan to high esteem. The guy is extremely intelligent and accomplished, so it's easy to understand why. He's a former marine, a PhD., a CIA analyst, and later a professor. But, Jack Ryan the character (at least in the films) isn't an overly exciting person. Some will argue that this is Chris Pine's fault, but the same can be said for when Alec Baldwin, Harrison Ford, and Ben Affleck all played Ryan in the past. It's not the actors, but the character himself that falls a little on the stale side of things. 

What is good about this film, however, is that it doesn't throw aside Jack's intelligence. Director Kenneth Branagh (he's pulling double duty) describes Jack as the "every man," which means he doesn't have James Bond's license to kill, nor Jason Bourne's very honed fighting skills. He's just a guy who tries to do good things and finds himself in not-so-good situations. 

The film does have a good cast. Chris Pine fills in the Jack Ryan shoes pretty well. Although as an actor, he's much more entertaining to watch when he has more to do. And this role doesn't give him much in the way of great dialogue, but he can play the action hero really well. He does have great chemistry with Keira Knightley and they're endearing together. 

Their relationship is one of the stronger aspects of the film and there should have been more of it because they are some of the best parts to watch. Their relationship is very equal and much more layered than in the previous films, which is why the personal attack later in the movie is more... well, personal. Knightley has a pretty good American accent, too. And while she falls briefly into the damsel-in-distress category, she's brave enough to want to help Jack out, and that says a lot about her character. 

Kevin Costner gives the tough love in this film and keeps Jack from falling off the proverbial thin line he's walking. He's the type of guy who sees a mission through to its end and doesn't just sit around at his desk giving advice. And Kenneth Branagh has seemingly mastered his Russian accent and plays the baddie like its second nature even when there isn't anything deeper to his character besides being semi-threatening. There's a hint of something else, but we never get any of what's behind it. 

Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit is much less boring than the previous Jack Ryan movies and much less Jason Bourne-esque than a lot of people assumed it would be, it's ultimately very mediocre. There isn't anything amazing about it or its characters. And while the story tries hard to make us all care that some Russian guy is attempting to bring down our economy, it lacks a more fluid execution and suspense build up. 

It has more action and hyped suspense, and while they do well to portray Jack's nervousness and fear at being in a situation out of his depth, the entire film just feels a little underwhelming. If you enjoyed the previous movies though, then you'll probably like this one as well. It has its semi-entertaining moments, but it's nothing we haven't seen before and is really more of the same when it comes to the typical action/suspense films.






Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Kevin Costner Gets Lethal in New 'Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit' Clip


In anticipation for its release this week, Fandango has posted a new clip from the film Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit. This one's only thirty five seconds long, but gives a little bit more of a glimpse into Kevin Costner's character. Costner's seen here being Jack's eyes as the older man shoots the lackeys gunning for Jack. Costner's character is extremely accurate and competent in doing his job, so it'll be interesting to see all his characteristics play out on the big screen. 

You can check out the clip below! 

Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit hits theaters January 17 and also stars Chris Pine, Keira Knightley, and Kenneth Branagh. 

Synopsis: The story follows him from 9/11, through his tour of duty in Afghanistan, which scarred him forever, and into his early days in the Financial Intelligence Unit of the modern CIA where he becomes an analyst, under the guardianship of his handler, Harper (Kevin Costner). When Ryan believes he's uncovered a Russian plot to collapse the United States economy, he goes from being an analyst to becoming a spy and must fight to save his own life and those of countless others, while also trying to protect the thing that's more important to him than anything, his relationship with his fiancĂ©e Cathy (Keira Knightley). 


Wednesday, January 8, 2014

'Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit' Features Keira Knightley in One of Two New Clips


In a little over a week, Paramount will regale us with the tale of Jack Ryan. Except this will be a newer, more modern version of Jack Ryan and more of an origin story for the well-known Tom Clancy character. It'll be the first movie that isn't based on any of Clancy's previous books about the CIA analyst and Chris Pine will be the fourth actor to step into the character's shoes. 

Two new clips from the film have been released, each dealing with two different but probably important aspects of the plot. The first one is titled "Couples Therapy" and, as you guess, is relationship-based. Ryan's fiance Cathy (played by an American-accented Keira Knightley) is angry with him after finding out that he's been lying to her about who he works for the last three years and Kevin Costner reminds them that this isn't couples therapy. Knightley pulls off a pretty good American accent, too. 



The second clip sees Costner's character, who plays an almost-mentor/handler to Pine's Ryan, let's Jack know that he's no longer just an analyst anymore, but operational. The second clip is pretty straightforward, but everyone may not be as they seem. Especially if the character posters are anything to go by, which you can view here and here

Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit is directed and also stars Kenneth Branagh and hits theaters January 17. 

Friday, January 3, 2014

*UPDATE* First Clip and Character Posters for 'Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit'



If it wasn't for Martin Scorsese's troubles with The Wolf of Wall Street, we'd already be talking about how Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit fared over the holidays. But instead it was bumped down to later this month when it will be one of the year's first potential blockbusters. The first action-packed clip, clocking in at over four minutes has been released, joined by a pair of character posters featuring Keira Knightley and Kevin Costner.  Hers is particularly interesting as the "Accomplice. Asset. Weapon" descriptors suggest she'll be a lot more than just Jack Ryan's wife, but we can probably assume everybody is more than who they seem to be. The clip, very much in the vein of Jason Bourne, shows Ryan putting his fighting skills to the test and making his very first kill. Sure there will be plenty more where that came from.

Directed by and co-starring Kenneth Branagh, Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit opens January 17th.



PLOT: Based on the character created by bestselling author Tom Clancy, “Jack Ryan” is a global action thriller set in the present day.  This original story follow a young Jack (Chris Pine) as he uncovers a financial terrorist plot.

The story follows him from 9/11, through his tour of duty in Afghanistan, which scarred him forever, and into his early days in the Financial Intelligence Unit of the modern CIA where he becomes an analyst, under the guardianship of his handler, Harper (Kevin Costner).  When Ryan believes he’s uncovered a Russian plot to collapse the United States economy, he goes from being an analyst to becoming a spy and must fight to save his own life and those of countless others, while also trying to protect the thing that’s more important to him than anything, his relationship with his fiancĂ©e Cathy (Keira Knightley).

Monday, December 23, 2013

Kevin Costner Makes the Top Pick in First 'Draft Day' Trailer


For fans of the NFL, the day of the college draft is full of promise. It's the time when Hall of Fame careers begin and championship franchises are built. It can be pretty intense, and director Ivan Reitman hopes to capture that energy in the sports drama Draft Day, and judging by the first trailer he may have it nailed.

Kevin Costner stars as the general manager of the Cleveland Browns who finds himself under the gun when his team trades for the #1 draft pick. Set over the course of a single day, he must try and save football in Cleveland while balancing his personal and professional life, which includes flirting over football with Jennifer Garner. Obviously the comparisons to Moneyball are there as the film goes into the internal mechanics of a pro ball club, and if this proves half as successful as that was Draft Day won't have to worry about being labeled "Mr. Irrelevant".

Directed by Ivan Reitman and co-starring Frank Langella, Joe Manganiello, Chadwick Boseman, Denis Leary, Terry Crews, Sam Elliott, Ellen Burstyn, Tom Welling, Sean Combs, and Rosanna Arquette, Draft Day gets selected on April 11th 2014.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

First Trailer for '3 Days to Kill' with Kevin Costner and Amber Heard


When Luc Besson doesn't have the time to fully indulge in another one of his specific brand of Euro action flicks like Taken or Colombiana, he has a large stable of interchangeable directors who can do it for him. Those guys include Olivier Megaton, Pierre Morel, and now McG has picked up the mantle for 3 Days to Kill, a movie about an aging hitman. And nope, Liam Neeson is nowhere to be found.

Instead it's Kevin Costner, Pa Kent himself, as a government wetworks agent who learns he has a terminal disease and quits the job to try and connect with his daughter, played by Hailee Steinfeld. Amber Heard is his mysterious handler  and when she makes him an offer for a life-saving cure if he completes one last dangerous mission ("one last mission" alert!!!!), he accepts and stuff gets blown up real good, along with plenty of Costner punching things.  Overall, this looks pretty generic and too much like Taken redux, but if it leads to more Costner that's not such a bad thing.

3 Days to Kill opens February 21st.


Three Days to Kill - Trailer by Daily Movies Switzerland

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

New International Trailer for 'Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit'



Paramount took their time unveiling Kenneth Branagh's Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit, but with the film set to open in just a couple of months they're pulling out all of the stops. After the first trailer debuted just last week, a second one has hit and reconfirms that Tom Clancy's most popular CIA analyst has now become a Jason Bourne clone.

At least that's the takeaway from all of the footage that has been revealed, with star Chris Pine beating up bad guys and taking the field to foil explosive terrorist plots. It's a very different sort of film than we got in The Hunt for Red October, Patriot Games , Clear and Present Danger, and The Sum of All Fears, but it's one that may play better to audiences looking for more action than political intrigue. The flip side is that there's very little about the film that stands out as special.

Branagh directs and co-stars alongside Kevin Costner and Keira Knightley, and we can expect to see Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit in theaters Christmas Day.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

First Trailer for 'Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit' Starring Chris Pine


Inevitably, there were some who speculated that Paramount's release of the first Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit poster was a way of using Tom Clancy's death as a launching pad for the marketing campaign. If that were the case it'd be beyond tacky, and there's no proof it was ever in their thoughts even if it couldn't have hurt to draw some added attention. Traditionally, the poster always hits a day or two before the trailer emerges, and that's exactly what we have now.

The first trailer for the unfortunately-titled Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit has arrived, starring Chris Pine as Clancy's most popular character (sorry, Sam Fisher fans!). He picks up the mantle left by Harrison Ford, Alec Baldwin, and Ben Affleck, playing a younger version of Ryan investigating his boss who plans to commit an act of economic terrorism. Kenneth Branagh directs and sports a Drago accent as the villain, while Keira Knightley is Ryan's wife who discovers his double-life as an agent. We get glimpses of action and a lot of Kevin Costner as Ryan's CIA handler, and he instantly seems like more of a central figure than Pine, which could be a problem. While he's done quite well as part of the Star Trek ensemble, Pine has yet to prove he can be a major box office draw. Personally, I think he's boring as dry toast and if this film fails it will be because of him.

Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit opens on Christmas Day.


Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit - Trailer (Chris Pine, Keira Knightley & Kevin Costner) by cinemur

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Dane DeHaan Joins 'Life After Beth'; Kevin Costner In 'Midnight Delivery'; 'Veronica Mars' Adds Gaby Hoffmann



* After a lengthy delay, the horror comedy Life after Beth finally began rolling. John C. Reilly and Aubrey Plaza have been attached since the beginning, and now as production begins we're learning of one more big addition. Dane DeHaan has joined the cast, fresh off wrapping up his Harry Osborn role in The Amazing Spider-Man 2. Coming along with him is Paul Reiser (Mad About You), who will be playing DeHaan's father. The story, written and directed by Jeff Baena (I Heart Huckabees), has DeHaan as a young man who tries to continue his relationship with his girlfriend after she returns from the dead. [THR]

* Continuing the roll he's been on since playing Pa Kent in Man of Steel, Kevin Costner has now joined Midnight Delivery, co-written and by produced by Guillermo Del Toro. The film sounds an awful lot like Dwayne Johnson's Snitch, and has Costner as a father who must become a drug mule for a Colombian druglord in order to save his daughter. Brian Kirk (Game of Thrones) had been in line to direct, but he jumped ship to helm Passengers with Keanu Reeves. Neil Cross (Luther) co-wrote the script, and could be a solid candidate to step in before filming begins in the fall. [THR]

* As the Veronica Mars film heads to Comic-Con for what should be one raucous panel, show creator Rob Thomas is steady adding new faces to the cast. We already learned that James Franco would be appearing as himself, and now we can expect to see Gaby Hoffmann as new character Ruby Jetson. Hoffmann, who I'll always be fond of for movies like Uncle Buck and 200 Cigarettes, can be seen right now starring with Michael Cera in Crystal Fairy. Thomas has done a pretty good job getting all of the show's cast together, but unfortunately he couldn't work out the schedule with Leighton Meester, who played pop star Carrie Bishop for a couple of episodes. So her role has been filled by Twin Sister lead singer, Andrea Estella.