Ovaj ti je izasao danas ili juce,snimak je TS,malo preraden snimak iz kina,nadi linkove ako nemas strpljenja cekati bolji snimak!Ako nemozes naci linkove posalji pp posto ne smijem postati da ne bih zavrsio u banovicima!
#14 Re: Novi filmovi na koje jedva cekate
Posted: 27/04/2011 15:49
by johnnykola
samo i jedino.
#15 Re: Novi filmovi na koje jedva cekate
Posted: 27/04/2011 15:52
by Truba
johnnykola wrote:
samo i jedino.
da spavaš kao na antikristu????
ja to čekam zbog jedne i jedine kirstenke
#16 Re: Novi filmovi na koje jedva cekate
Posted: 27/04/2011 16:01
by johnnykola
:pppppppppppppp
tad sam bio zesce smoren. da ne pisem zasto.
trailer je preDivan.
#17 Re: Novi filmovi na koje jedva cekate
Posted: 27/04/2011 16:03
by Truba
kirsten je predivna od 1994 sam u ljubavi s njom
ja čekam i Vrisak 4
i gomilu sf naslova koji nikad neće biti snimljeni
#18 Re: Novi filmovi na koje jedva cekate
Posted: 27/04/2011 16:04
by johnnykola
:ppppppppppppppppppppppppp
meni izgleda kao naka koja se nikad nije liba:p najela kako triba.
Zaboravi reci da cekam na star trek 2012
Cekao sam i na nove filmove iz Stargate branse ali nista od toga MGM bankrotirao
#24 Re: Novi filmovi na koje jedva cekate
Posted: 27/04/2011 18:07
by Truba
Cat's Cradle (2011)
We've talked before at how hard it will be to turn Kurt Vonnegut's tale of global disaster into a meaningful movie, in spite of the wonderful device of 'Ice-9', which is a type of scientifically-engineered ice that freezes at ambient temperatures and pretty much lays waste to the world. Leonardo DiCaprio's Appian Way seems to be sitting on this for the moment, and perhaps that's just the way things should stay. What the book deserves, Hollywood can't offer - it's a uniquely literary experience, along with most of Vonnegut's output.
Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said (2011)
Hollywood's determination to film everything Philip K. Dick ever wrote (they could do a lot worse - and they do) continues with this forthcoming adaptation of the 1974 novel about a pop-singer/idol whose ex-girlfriend throws an alien parasite at him; he wakes up the following day apparently having lost all of his fame; no-one knows who he is - not even the police and civic authorities. The book won the 1975 John W. Campbell award, and the adaptation is produced by Terminator Salvation's Derek Anderson.
Neuromancer (2011)
William Gibson's seminal 80s SF thriller has been green-lit more often than a black cab, and it's anyone's guess as to whether the latest attempt by Joseph Kahn will actually make it to the big screen. Hayden Christensen is attached as the lead. Peter Hoffman, who has a credit as 'presenter' in the not-so-successful 1995 adaptation of Gibson's Johnny Mnemonic, is producing, with a budget currently reported at $70 million. Liv Tyler is also rumoured to be attached. Neuromancer deals with a disgraced hacker who has been physically disabled from interfacing with any computers in the future society he lives in. He's rescued by a mysterious Samurai benefactor who temporarily cures his disability but implants him with Escape From New York-style 'poison sacs' before sending him on a new mission (Gibson has talked about how Neuromancer sprang off from some early lines in John Carpenter's 1980 SF-thriller).
The Cross (2010)
This Australian/French/German co-production stars Orlando Bloom as a man in a border-town who attempts to cross the border in question, which no-one else from his community has ever been able to do. Not much more is known about the plot, but director Andrew Niccol has a firm credentials in the form of Gattaca, Lord Of War and S1m0ne. Bloom is joined by Olga Kurylenko, Vincent Cassel and John Goodman. Cassell plays Bloom's nemesis, presumably one of the reasons that the mysterious border is so hard to cross. Lord Of War and 10,000 BC production designer Jean-Vincent Puzos is on board.