Guys, I’m worried… that the movie Battleship isn’t going
to stay true to the source material.
When I first heard that the classic kids game was being made
into a feature film, I thought, “Great, yes, finally – they’re going to make a
movie about cheating, deception, and sibling rivalry!” But I’ve seen the trailers, and it
doesn’t look like any ships get stacked on top of other ships in order to trick
your younger brother.
And Liam Neeson’s in the film? How much do I want to hear Liam Neeson call out “You sunk my
battleship!” as he struggles to get his crew into lifeboats. So badly. And yet, I just know I’m going to leave the theater going,
“yeah, it was okay, but the game was way better.”
Since this board game-to-film craze shows no signs of
letting up, here are some movies I’d like to see:
Robert Rodriguez’s Go To Texas – Oil barons, decrepit
ranchers, and tawdry saloon patrons butt heads in a Texas town under a
post-apocalyptic backdrop. Based
on a little-known board game that’s excruciatingly similar to “Monopoly,” but
takes place in Texas. (Get on this
San Antonio tourism board!)
Pedro Almodovar’s Sequence – An aging soap opera actress
and her young protégé host a dinner party attended by a drag queen, a once funny
but now melancholy comedian, and a poet having a midlife crisis. But what happens when one of them is
suddenly taken hostage?
J.J. Abrams’ Settlers of Catan – A desolate island nation
lies in peril under the harsh dictatorship of the land’s ruler, who is
stockpiling resources and treating his countrymen as slaves. When a small band of peasants bonds
together, an uprising begins. Can
the peasants stay together, or does the luster of power mean it’s every man for
himself? (So many sequel
possibilities!)
Guillermo Del Toro’s Candyland – A young girl loses her
way home and winds up in a fluorescent forest, but something dark and menacing
lurks beneath the saccharine sheen.
She quickly finds herself battling for her life against the monsters of
the woods. Alas, nothing is quite
as sweet as it seems.
Sofia Coppola’s Don’t Break The Ice – An alcoholic figure skater returns to their hometown after an unsuccessful Olympics bid and reconnects with their past on the road to sobriety. When a young child gets caught in a patch of thin ice, there may be only one person who can save them. Gin, love, and a skating career are all on the rocks.
Sofia Coppola’s Don’t Break The Ice – An alcoholic figure skater returns to their hometown after an unsuccessful Olympics bid and reconnects with their past on the road to sobriety. When a young child gets caught in a patch of thin ice, there may be only one person who can save them. Gin, love, and a skating career are all on the rocks.
1 comment:
How wrong is it that I totally want to see those movies?
(Also, if you didn't realize: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/01/31/us-candyland-adamsandler-idUSTRE80U2CQ20120131)
Post a Comment