Dante Posted July 27, 2010 Posted July 27, 2010 Zack Snyder’s Sucker Punch The film stars Abbie Cornish, Jena Malone, Emily Browning, Scott Glenn, Vanessa Hudgens and Jamie Chung. The film follows Emily Browning’s character, Babydoll, who is confined to a mental institution from which she fantasizes an alternate reality. Browning and the other girls seen here are all wards of the institution, and this shot is part of the fantasy reality, in which Browning is trying to find a handful of objects that will allow her to escape. Snyder has said many times that the film will be a dark, violent fantasty full of guns, action and monsters. Trailer Posters
Shino Posted July 27, 2010 Posted July 27, 2010 What a weird mash up of styles. The trailer didn't do much for me, I'm too used to all this themes thanks to video games.
Guy Posted July 27, 2010 Posted July 27, 2010 This looks excellent. It gives my inner nerd a boner... and also my dick a boner. Boners.
ReZourceman Posted July 27, 2010 Posted July 27, 2010 Yeah, I should think I would like to see this. It does look boner inducing indeed. ---- Just watched the trailer and am indeed now sporting a massive erection.
Tissue Town Posted July 27, 2010 Posted July 27, 2010 This looks like something Internet males will like.
Mr_Odwin Posted July 27, 2010 Posted July 27, 2010 This looks crap. I'd write more, but that just sums up all my feelings.
Dannyboy-the-Dane Posted July 27, 2010 Posted July 27, 2010 Looks amazing! ... Oh, the film? I dunno. I might watch it.
ReZourceman Posted July 27, 2010 Posted July 27, 2010 Is it cool to dislike awesome stuff now or what?
Coolness Bears Posted July 28, 2010 Posted July 28, 2010 I think we have a new favourite film. Ninja Cheerleaders move aside. :p
Daft Posted March 2, 2011 Posted March 2, 2011 Right you tards, this looks off the scale awesome. New TV Spot. They used Data's Blood Theme in the trailer. Yes. I'm so excited for this it hurts a little.
The Peeps Posted March 2, 2011 Posted March 2, 2011 That looks completely retarded. I agree. It looks absolutely ridiculous. I must see it!
ReZourceman Posted March 3, 2011 Posted March 3, 2011 I'm going to get so many boners, I cannot fucking wait. I can't believe that there are a bunch of pussies above us saying it looks shit. Off the fucking hook, nuts-awesome. I'm glad people make films like this. When is it out?
Happenstance Posted March 3, 2011 Posted March 3, 2011 I think it looks awesomely over the top and I cant wait to see it.
MoogleViper Posted March 3, 2011 Posted March 3, 2011 Lots of hot women means a film is shit*. The film is rubbish so they have to compensate by filling it with scantily clad, sexy maidens so that loads of men watch it think "PHWOAR! I'd do her!" and are too shallow to actually notice the film has very little story. *excludes porn films.
drahkon Posted March 3, 2011 Posted March 3, 2011 Lots of hot women means a film is shit*. The film is rubbish so they have to compensate by filling it with scantily clad, sexy maidens so that loads of men watch it think "PHWOAR! I'd do her!" and are too shallow to actually notice the film has very little story.*excludes porn films. :p But I agree with you there, Moogle.
Beast Posted March 3, 2011 Posted March 3, 2011 I think the trailer looks awesome and stylish and I'm loving the posters.
Dante Posted March 11, 2011 Author Posted March 11, 2011 (edited) 1. Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)—Emily Browning 2. Army Of Me (Sucker Punch Remix)—Björk featuring Skunk Anansie 3. White Rabbit—Emiliana Torrini 4. I Want It All/We Will Rock You Mash-Up—Queen w/ Armageddon Aka Geddy 5. Search and Destroy—Skunk Anansie 6. Tomorrow Never Knows—Alison Mosshart and Carla Azar 7. Where Is My Mind?—Yoav featuring Emily Browning 8. Asleep—Emily Browning 9. Love Is the Drug—Carla Gugino and Oscar Isaac Edited March 11, 2011 by Dante
Paj! Posted March 11, 2011 Posted March 11, 2011 The soundtrack sounds too good for me (in writing anyway). I also heard (on fbook) Illusion of Love by Uffie will be on it too. *faints at Bjork*
Dante Posted March 24, 2011 Author Posted March 24, 2011 Interview. - MPAA Problems Some of his ambivalence may be due to the fact that after the film was finished and submitted to the MPAA problems began to surface. “I made the movie with the intention of it being PG-13. I just had no idea how far you’d have to go to keep it PG-13,” Snyder says. His wife and producer, Deborah Snyder agrees, “It took us five tries.” Zack continues, “So, you know, I don’t know how they could come down that hard on us, but they came down pretty hard on us I think. I was like, I can’t, when we were struggling with it I was like, I can’t have this movie be Rated R. Personally I can’t, because this would be the worst R ever, in history, right? Because it’s R for like leering and weirdness, which is just a bad R. If I went to it and saw it I would say, ‘This is fucking… where is my R rated shit?’ Snyder continues, “Because Debbie can tell you, I can make an R movie if I have to. If I want to make an R rated movie it’s going to be Rated R. You know, I’m like adamant about that. But, in this case, part of the reason we decided to make it PG-13 was that I was afraid that the idea would get lost in the violence, in the sex and violence, because I would’ve just gone for it. It would’ve got pretty frickin’ dark pretty fast. Not to say that it’s not dark now as it is but it would’ve been way worse. I can’t even begin to imagine what it would’ve been like. It would’ve been awesome.” While it’s not out of the ordinary for a film to change in the cutting room, or even change significantly, it’s relatively rare for entire concepts that were in the original script to be shot and then done away with. Regrettably, due to the MPAA or otherwise, this is case with Sucker Punch. The original concept called for dance routines for each character, five in all plus a group number, but in the final cut only one has survived and it has been relegated to the final credits. This results in a film with a subconscious. There is a palpable feeling of something missing and several scenes where extras are standing in the background waiting for something to happen which tragically for them, never will. When pre-production on the film began and Marius De Vries, music director of Moulin Rouge, was hired, in addition to choreographer Paul Becker, most journalists assumed the film would be part musical. Becker was not present at the film’s junket in Los Angeles, but during a 14 March 2011 interview he described the Sucker Punch’s dance sequences, apparently unaware that they would not be in the final film, “Each female lead in the film has a persona and objective. We meshed the objective and persona of each character to the tone and concept of each dance. Because the film takes place in a brothel it calls for these huge production numbers.” Jena Malone, who played Rocket, said, “I did a sci-fi nurse zombie pole dance. Look for the director’s cut, I think you’ll be satisfied with that and so shall we. We all worked really hard on these dances that we got to do and they’re very fulfilling.” Carla Gugino reacted by saying, “They [the dance sequences] really were very key. I think down the road you’ll eventually see it in the body of the movie.” Carla’s counterpart, Oscar Isaac said, “At the time it [our dance] was, as scripted, in the middle of the film and uh, as we worked on it, it would start to reveal all these levels of what our relationship may have been.” Music producer Marius De Vries offered the clearest explanation for the removal of the dance sequences when he said, “We had an awful lot of possible strategies. Zack wanted to be adventurous and be able to experiment and didn’t want to commit up front to one particular way of doing this [...] There were songs that were actually shot as performance pieces because we wanted to see how far into that theatricalized level of reality which is one of her delusions, how far we could go and not break the turn of the movie. And the answer to that is not as far as we thought.” Although it’s difficult to believe that six elaborate dance sequences were scored, shot and then cut because Snyder “didn’t want to commit up front” we will probably never know the final explanation.
Dannyboy-the-Dane Posted March 24, 2011 Posted March 24, 2011 If the scenes were cut to get a PG-13 rating, and if the movie suffered because of it, I have just one more reason to hate the ratings system.
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