Cinema Retro has received the following press release:
The Los Angeles Comic Book And Science Fiction Convention presents Classic Movie Poster Artist Robert Tanenbaum, Jean Hale (In Like Flint), Sharyn Wynters (The Female Bunch), and Donna Loren (Bikini Beach) at the August 20, 2017 Show.
Robert Tanenbaum is a Movie Poster Artist with an over 50 year career illustrating every film genre such as Science Fiction, Horror, Comedy, War, Drama and Martial Arts. Robert has illustrated such Classic Movie Posters as A Christmas Story, Battle For The Planet Of The Apes, Cujo, Five Fingers Of Death, Black Christmas, Super Fly, The Color Of Money, My Bodyguard, Dirty Mary Crazy Larry, The Iron Cross, The Eagle Has Landed, Ransom, Cleopatra Jones And The Casino Of Gold, Hot Potato, Mel Brooks High Anxiety and Silent Night, Evil Night. Robert’s art is featured on the first announcement that Jaws was being made into a Movie.
The Los Angeles Comic Book And Science Fiction Convention presents Classic Movie Poster Artist Robert Tanenbaum, Jean Hale (In Like Flint), Sharyn Wynters (The Female Bunch), and Donna Loren (Bikini Beach) at the August 20, 2017 Show.
Robert Tanenbaum is a Movie Poster Artist with an over 50 year career illustrating every film genre such as Science Fiction, Horror, Comedy, War, Drama and Martial Arts. Robert has illustrated such Classic Movie Posters as A Christmas Story, Battle For The Planet Of The Apes, Cujo, Five Fingers Of Death, Black Christmas, Super Fly, The Color Of Money, My Bodyguard, Dirty Mary Crazy Larry, The Iron Cross, The Eagle Has Landed, Ransom, Cleopatra Jones And The Casino Of Gold, Hot Potato, Mel Brooks High Anxiety and Silent Night, Evil Night. Robert’s art is featured on the first announcement that Jaws was being made into a Movie.
- 8/13/2017
- by nospam@example.com (Cinema Retro)
- Cinemaretro.com
The latest Junkfood Cinema comes with a confession.
It’s true, I’ll admit it. A young, overzealous film nerd named Brian studying at a small Indiana college wrote and (partially) shot a movie that, in concept and story structure, largely plagiarized the forgotten 1986 teen actioner Never Too Young to Die. It’s not an easy confession to make, as stealing content is the cardinal sin any writer can commit. If internet incarnate could administer its own justice, such violators would be hanged from the hashtags in droves.
I wrote a horrendously terrible movie called The Campus Job, in which I, at age 20, also played a mob boss. Hold on to your film cans, because it gets worse from there. The plot, applying that term with reckless relativity, revolved around a financially strapped college kid who finds out his late father was not a dry cleaner as had been reported, but...
It’s true, I’ll admit it. A young, overzealous film nerd named Brian studying at a small Indiana college wrote and (partially) shot a movie that, in concept and story structure, largely plagiarized the forgotten 1986 teen actioner Never Too Young to Die. It’s not an easy confession to make, as stealing content is the cardinal sin any writer can commit. If internet incarnate could administer its own justice, such violators would be hanged from the hashtags in droves.
I wrote a horrendously terrible movie called The Campus Job, in which I, at age 20, also played a mob boss. Hold on to your film cans, because it gets worse from there. The plot, applying that term with reckless relativity, revolved around a financially strapped college kid who finds out his late father was not a dry cleaner as had been reported, but...
- 7/14/2016
- by Brian Salisbury
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
During the 1980s I played with and destroyed a lot of my favorite toys. It was during the '90s where I started to take better care of my toys, and I started collecting them. I still have a bunch of action figures from that era that are still in the original packaging. One of my favorite action figure lines from this era was Todd McFalane's Spawn. Those things were freakin' awesome! That's also the time I started collecting the twelve inch G.I. Joe figures. I loved going to the various toys stores to collect those things. A lot of those stores don't even exist anymore. There are a few toys, though, from the '90s that completely slipped my mind, until I was going through some boxes and came across some that sparked some fun memories.
Exosquad
This is one of the toys that I found in a box...
Exosquad
This is one of the toys that I found in a box...
- 11/13/2014
- by Joey Paur
- GeekTyrant
Happy birthday, Mr. Bond! You get a new video game!
In honor of the 50th anniversary of the Bond franchise (along with the forthcoming release of Skyfall, the third Craig-Bond movie), Activision has announced that this fall they'll be releasing 007 Legends. No screens or video was made available here (we're reaching out) but from the description in the press release, this will be more of a "Best of Bond" game where you play through various scenarios from the last 22 movies in the series. The big innovation here is that not only will you be playing as Bond, but you'll also step into the shoes of some of the series' baddies and henchmen.
Here's the text from the press release:
A first-of-its-kind Bond video game, 007 Legends features an original, overarching storyline tying together six classic Bond movies, concluding with this year's highly-anticipated 23rd installment - Skyfall - to offer the most diverse Bond gaming experience yet!
In honor of the 50th anniversary of the Bond franchise (along with the forthcoming release of Skyfall, the third Craig-Bond movie), Activision has announced that this fall they'll be releasing 007 Legends. No screens or video was made available here (we're reaching out) but from the description in the press release, this will be more of a "Best of Bond" game where you play through various scenarios from the last 22 movies in the series. The big innovation here is that not only will you be playing as Bond, but you'll also step into the shoes of some of the series' baddies and henchmen.
Here's the text from the press release:
A first-of-its-kind Bond video game, 007 Legends features an original, overarching storyline tying together six classic Bond movies, concluding with this year's highly-anticipated 23rd installment - Skyfall - to offer the most diverse Bond gaming experience yet!
- 4/18/2012
- by Charles Webb
- MTV Multiplayer
Yes, the moment you may or may not have been waiting for since 1991 is almost here: 21 Jump Street, the overly sincere, denim heavy, painfully ‘80s TV series about baby-faced cops going undercover in high schools, blowin’ up the spot and teaching everyone about morals or whatever, has been updated and turned into a movie that’s being released this weekend! The series, which aired from 1987 to 1991, served as a launching pad for the career of one of today’s greatest actors: Peter DeLuise. (Johnny Depp may have also been on the show.) The weird premise and casting of a pre-mega fame DeLuise are, I guess, what keep 21 Jump Street alive in our collective memory all of these years later. (Although, I don’t think that this new movie is necessarily intended for people who were fans of the series or who were even alive during its run.) Even though the whole “film based on old TV show...
- 3/14/2012
- by Amber Humphrey
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
When we first saw the trailer for Hugh Jackman’s Robo-Boxing movie Real Steel, our reactions ranged from “Good one, tv, but we know this isn’t real” (flash-forward to 12 trailers later – “oh God”) to “This is a complete ripoff of Rock ‘Em Sock ‘Em Robots,” a half-joking half-plausible analysis in this age of epic toy films. Upon further research (of remembering dumb stuff), I believe we’ve uncovered the actual genesis for Real Steel: The concept was completely stolen from an episode of the late-80s cartoon C.O.P.S. The Animated Series. Anyone remember C.O.P.S.? “Fighting Crime In A Future Time”? All of you do? Awesome. One of the C.O.P.S. episodes was called “The Case Of The Big Bad Boxoids,” and featured the cops and criminals squaring off in an ultimate showdown inside giant futuristic boxing robots. Sound familiar? After the jump,...
- 10/7/2011
- by Dan Hopper
- BestWeekEver
Eddie Barth was a veteran character actor who was a familiar face on television from the early 1960s, guest-starring in episodes of such series as The Twilight Zone, The Invaders, The Bionic Woman, The Incredible Hulk, Whiz Kids, Mike Hammer, and Scarecrow and Mrs. King.
Barth was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on September 29, 1931. He co-starred as Lt. Al Rossi in the short-lived 1973 television version of Shaft starring Richard Roundtree, and appeared in the recurring role of Myron Fowler, a rival private detective, in the series Simon & Simon from 1981 to 1988. He was also seen in the tele-films The Man in the Santa Claus Suit (1979) and The Murder of Sherlock Holmes (1984), and the feature films The Amityville Horror (1979) and Killing Obsession (1994).
He was also noted as a voice actor in such films as Rover Dangerfield (1991), Babe: Pig in the City (1998), and Osmosis Jones (2001), and in the animated television series Challenge of the GoBots,...
Barth was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on September 29, 1931. He co-starred as Lt. Al Rossi in the short-lived 1973 television version of Shaft starring Richard Roundtree, and appeared in the recurring role of Myron Fowler, a rival private detective, in the series Simon & Simon from 1981 to 1988. He was also seen in the tele-films The Man in the Santa Claus Suit (1979) and The Murder of Sherlock Holmes (1984), and the feature films The Amityville Horror (1979) and Killing Obsession (1994).
He was also noted as a voice actor in such films as Rover Dangerfield (1991), Babe: Pig in the City (1998), and Osmosis Jones (2001), and in the animated television series Challenge of the GoBots,...
- 6/22/2010
- by Harris Lentz
- FamousMonsters of Filmland
What smells like money and workout sweat? According to the La Times Hero Complex Blog, that smell is probably New Moon star Taylor Lautner’s potential next project: Max Steel. The film will chronicle the adventures of a 19-year old extreme athlete who accidentally becomes a nano-technologically enhanced secret agent. Max Steel might sound familiar because: A. It is a cheap “James Bond Jr.” knock off…which is already a cheap James Bond Knock off. B. It was originally a semi successful late 90s early 2000s CG animated show (ala "Beast Wars" or "Reboot") and ongoing toy line. See here. Despite never catching on huge in the Us, Max Steel is apparently more popular around the world. The writers on the project, J.P. Lavin and Chad Damiani, are also writing the script for Brett Ratner’s Youngblood adaptation. I’m a little surprised Paramount is dusting off this franchise for a film. XXX...
- 12/4/2009
- by Jorge Del Pinal
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
What happens when a Larry The Cable Guy-caliber trailer park hillbilly buys into James Bond’s super secret poker game? I missed this one last week. /Film reader Sam K sends over Saturday Night Live’s “Live Another Death” James Bond Spoof featuring Bill Hader as 007. Related Stories The /Filmcast: After Dark - Ep. 25 (Guests: Katie Spence and Ben Brown) Votd: Quantum of Bonds Movie Review: Quantum of Solace “Quantum of Solace” Almost Featured a James Bond Jr. This Week in DVD: The Incredible Hulk, The Strangers, Family Guy (Vol. 6), and More Who Should Direct The Next James Bond Movie?...
- 12/5/2008
- by Peter Sciretta
- Slash Film
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