Bale/Crowe Western gets poster and new release date

Poster source: ComingSoon.net

3:10 to Yuma, the upcoming Western from Walk the Line director James Mangold starring Christian Bale and Russell Crowe, has a poster:


Click for larger version

I previously put up a post with a link to the movie’s trailer, but since then the release date has been moved up from October 5 to September 7.

And that’s what’s referred to in the movie business as “good news for me.”

The story sounds awesome. Bale plays a peaceful rancher who volunteers to take Crowe — the baddest of the bad guys — to the authorities on the 3:10 train to Yuma in exchange for the government building a well on his drought-stricken farm. But Crowe’s gang of fiendish outlaws will do anything to rescue their boss, forcing Bale’s character into some grim and gritty Wild West action.

Check out the trailer.

It rocks.

(And the guy doing all the awesome pistol spins is Ben Foster, who played Angel in X-Men 3.)

I’ll meet you on the 3:10 train to a theater near you-ma and me on September 7!

Darjeeling Limited poster and TRAILER online NOW!

Shake down my list of Top 10 Favorite Movies of All Time and you’ll find three of Wes Anderson’s four films there: Rushmore (which is number one and always will be), Bottle Rocket and The Royal Tenenbaums. I love The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, too, but there’s not quite a spot for it in the Top 10.

(No offense to Anderson or the movie. I’ve just seen lots of good movies.)

I love everything about Anderson’s films, from the way he uses songs to tell the story to the way he uses color to tell you who a character is to the sweetly odd but always endearing ways he portrays humor and heart.

Which is why I’m ridiculously excited about his newest film, The Darjeeling Limited, which is about an older brother (Owen Wilson) who takes his two younger brothers (Jason Schwartzman and Adrien Brody) on a train trip across India in a well-meaning — but probably hilariously misguided — attempt to pull the three men together after their dad dies.

Here’s the poster:


Click for a larger version

Brilliant!

And!

What’s in the pirate box? What’s in the pirate box?

And!

If you’d like to see the trailer (and believe me, you’d like to see the trailer), please go here:

The Darjeeling Limited trailer at Apple Trailers

… for a cornucopia of viewing sizes.

It’s magic.

The Darjeeling Limited hits the New York Film Festival on September 28 and will hopefully find its way to a theater near me shortly thereafter.

Excelsior!

Yesterday, my good friend Kareem met Stan Lee.

And that is awesome.

Lee created Spider-Man, the Hulk, the X-Men, the Fantastic Four and so many other amazing comic book characters for Marvel Comics. Kareem and I have spent untold hours talking on the phone and in person about comic books and superhero movies that we wouldn’t even have today without the hard work of people like Stan the Man.

Kareem and his dad were on their way to get haircuts at their barber in Beverly Hills and ended up going a little early when she told them she could work them in a little earlier than she’d previously thought. So Kareem and his dad are walking down the street on their way to their appointment and who does Kareem see but a man who looks a lot like Stan Lee strolling around by himself and window shopping.

So Kareem walks up to him and says, “Excuse me, sir. Are you Stan Lee?”

Stan the Man turns around and says, “Guilty!”

They talked for a bit and Kareem thanked Stan for all the wonderful characters he’s created and nurtured since writing an issue of Captain America in 1941.

“He was exactly like you’d expect him to be,” Kareem told me. “Very sweet and humble and gracious.”

Stan gladly agreed to pose for a photo with Kareem. And as Kareem was walking away, Stan tapped him on the shoulder and said, “Thank you for making me feel important.”

I’ve got the best kind of lump in my throat just thinking about it.

Huge thanks to my friend Kareem for years of top-drawer discussion about the superhero movies and comics we grew up with and for sharing his photo and story, and thanks to Stan the Man for inspiring generations of guys like me with stories that will last forever.

As for Kareem’s writing, you can check out his work alongside mine in the pages of Impact magazine. I’ve been writing for publications for nearly 15 years now. And even though Kareem’s several years younger than I am, he’s got a head on his shoulders and a way of expressing and articulating his passion for films that I’ll never have. And like I always tell him, when he hits it big I’m totally going to ask him for a job.

‘Nuff said.