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(11-18-2020, 10:22 AM)Drunk Monk Wrote: (08-13-2020, 06:38 AM)Greg Wrote: You should combine all these into one Batman Animated thread.
Especially in light of this, which looks made for DM.
Quote:[b]Batman: Soul of the Dragon[/b]
The latest animated Batman movie, taking Batman into a ‘70s-era martial arts adventure, will star [i]Grimm[/i]’s David Giuntoli as Batman, Michael Jai White as Bronze Tiger, Kelly Hu as Lady Shiva, and Mark Dacascos as Richard Dragon.
Once again, Greg is not wrong.
Just leaving this here for now. I just got tapped by Den about this.
Now if Greg would only find something 'made for DM' starring Charlize. Or even the antelope legged Nicole. That would be cool.
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Saw the screener. Imagine a cartoon version of Enter the Dragon but you swap out Roper for Batman. It's really not much of a Batman movie. It's about Richard Dragon, one of those DC heroes that I don't really know but did some web searching to get a handle on him. But in this version, he's Bruce Lee.
And he's voiced by Mark Dacascos, who Greg & I met at the Shaolin Summit about a decade ago. LCF wrote an article on his mom, who lives near the KFM HQ. I have a phoner interview with him tomorrow.
Other talent includes James Hong, Michael Jai White, and Kelly Hu. I wanted to do Kelly, but Den only tasked me with Mark. I may do another interview later with the writer. Maybe one feature pre-premiere and one post-premiere.
There's a magic sword. And more evil Cobras, but not Cobra Kai, it's the Cobra cult. What is it about cobras?
The animation is Korean and mediocre. The fight choreo is weak. There's some cultural appropriation issues, like Hong is clad in a Chinese style monk cassock but he's named O Sensei.
Yes to sword fights. Lady Shiva vs ninjas on motorcycles. Not DOOM recommended. Batman Ninja. That one I recommend.
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Dacascos?! I love that guy! But then, I love B action movies. “I am Omega” let him off the leash a bit and was fun. He was the best part of John Wick III
In the Tudor Period, Fencing Masters were classified in the Vagrancy Laws along with Actors, Gypsys, Vagabonds, Sturdy Rogues, and the owners of performing bears.
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He's pretty cool in person. Gracious. Greg took a photo with me and him and G2. G2 had no idea who he was.
I was working towards putting him on the cover of KFTC.
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He was also in Hawaii 5-0, I believe.
As a matter of fact, my anger does keep me warm
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He's been in a ton of stuff. He was the freakin Iron Chef. He first caught my attention with Brotherhood of the Wolf. I should revisit that. It was groundbreaking back in the day but now I wonder if it holds up.
I loved him in John Wick 3.
The interview went well. I'm pretty sure I got what I need for coverage. At least it wasn't feckin 4 mins for 2 people.
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He was awesome in John Wick.
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Right!? I luved that final scene where he's looking for John's approval with the sword sticking through him. That was so John Wick.
I was tempted to bring that up but it was a timed phoner, like all of these talent interviews, and I had to stay on topic.
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Just make Dacascos one of your celebrity circle of friends that you can call up anytime.
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Please?
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You know, I was working on that. His mom is one step removed - a friend of a friend - and local. Lcf did the story on her because I was really busy at that time and I wanted her take on it. I had lunch with Malia a few times and she said we’d get together with Mark sometime when he was in town. I really wanted to put him on our cover.
But alas...
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Dang. I just realized that Mark was born 2 days before me. Two days! It's funny because the fact that we were born in the same year came up in our little interview, somewhat randomly. But it's a good talking point if we ever get a chance to chat again.
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I watched this again to refresh my memory because Den liked my Dacascos interview enough that they hooked me up with the Director and Writer. I didn't realize how much of a deep dive it was into DC, not being a comics guys. There's a lot of nods to New Earth, which I never read and only know through Fandom.
I enjoyed it more the 2nd time because I was muddled with expectations and presumptions.
Dacascos is good throughout this, as is Kelly Hu. Michael Jai White is a bit caricature. James Hong, well, I kept hearing Mr. Ping.
For the record, it's Kobra Cult, not Cobra. My bad.
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(12-22-2020, 12:53 PM)Drunk Monk Wrote: He first caught my attention with Brotherhood of the Wolf. I should revisit that. It was groundbreaking back in the day but now I wonder if it holds up.
I searched for an existing thread!
https://gizmodo.com/brotherhood-of-the-w...1847396371
Quote:Brotherhood of the Wolf Is Still the Greatest French Historical Epic Martial Arts Monster Movie Ever Made
Rob Bricken
[img]data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==[/img]![[Image: 39a4b6117e01e008d1a9649342153668.jpg]](https://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/c_fit,f_auto,g_center,pg_1,q_60,w_1600/39a4b6117e01e008d1a9649342153668.jpg)
Mani (Mark Dacascos) shows some French thugs the bottom of his boots.Screenshot: Studio Canal/Shout Factory
Martial arts movies that double as historical epics are supposed to be set in Asia. They’re not supposed to take place in the opulent, luxurious, ostentatious mansions of the bewigged aristocracy of 1760s France. Yet 2001’s Brotherhood of the Wolf has the audacity to take these wildly incohesive elements, along with so much more, and mesh them almost seamlessly into one hell of an entertaining movie.
There’s the monster itself—based on the legendary Beast of Gévaudan—a mysterious creature who killed over a hundred men, women, and children in France between 1764 and 1767. There’s the titular Brotherhood, a secret society controlling the monster for their own nefarious purposes. There’s politics, romance, a guy with a sword that turns into a whip, and an Italian courtesan-spy (Monica Bellucci) who’s secretly working for the Pope. At the heart of it all are two knights: the royal naturalist Grégoire de Fronsac (Simon Le Bihan) and the Iroquois tracker Mani (Mark Dacascos), sent by the king to investigate the giant beast terrorizing Gévaudan.
There’s so much going on, Brotherhood of the Wolf should be an absolute mess, but the film has such complete confidence in itself that it works—again, as if a historical epic/martial arts flick/conspiracy thriller/romance/mystery/monster movie set in 18th-century France is the most natural genre in the world. Director Christopher Gans (Silent Hill) moves from badass fight sequence to gauzy romance scene to beast attack to unbelievably ornate historical drama with ease, all of them just a bit overindulgent but in the best sorts of ways. It helps that Gans’ direction and cinematography are marvelously stylish, sometimes mythic, sometimes empyreal, often simply beautiful. If you want a perfect encapsulation of the style of the movie, look no further than the incredible transition from Bellucci’s body, lounging in a luxurious bed, into a beautiful French landscape, which you can glimpse in this trailer (along with a lot of other great stuff).
To be certain, it’s not great that the non-Native American Dacascos was cast as Mani, but the actor has never been better than in Brotherhood of the Wolf, bringing a world of depth and wit to the mostly silent role. It also helps that the relationship between Mani and Fronsac is built on Dacascos and Le Bihan’s incredible charisma together. Fronsac called Mani his “brother,” and their performances, as well as the narrative, prove it. Honestly, all the actors are solid at the very least. None of the film’s other main characters are particularly inventive, and the actors portraying them could perform the roles in their sleep: Vincent Cassel as the increasingly deranged aristocrat/hunter Jean-François de Morangias; Émelie Dequenne as his ethereal sister and de Fronsac’s love interest Marianne; Bellucci as the enigmatic seductress Sylvia. But all of these actors are so talented that they’re compelling by default, and Brotherhood of the Wolf benefits immensely from them all.
The film also benefits from the fact that the Beast of Gévaudan was real. Whether it was an actual giant wolf or some other creature will always remain up for debate, but there really was something that killed people in 1760s France. It killed for sport instead of food, so vicious that its victims were frequently found beheaded, and so powerful that it could shrug off bullets. Without spoiling the film, Brotherhood of the Wolf is based on some real theories about the nature of the beast, including that someone purposefully created it and controlled it. There’s just enough reality inside the movie that Brotherhood’s wilder sequences feel satisfyingly grounded instead of totally ludicrous.
However, the film does need to come with a trigger warning: There’s a heavily implied rape scene, and there’s a long scene of regular wolves paying the price for the beast’s rampage, as they sadly did in reality. Mani is very much the “Magical Native American” trope, and you could argue Fronsac does some cultural appropriation later in the film. So there’s certainly no shame if you want to give Brotherhood of the Wolf a miss. But if you decide to check it out, you’ll be rewarded with a beautiful, genre-defying, and highly entertaining film that’s unlike any other movie you’ve ever seen. Unless there’s another historical epic/martial arts flick/conspiracy thriller/romance/mystery/monster movie I don’t know about.
Brotherhood of the Wolf is currently available on Blu-ray from Shout Factory (be warned, though, because the subtitles are impossibly bad—a big problem if you want to watch the movie in its native French language instead of dubbed in English).
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