Featured: The Expendables Official Movie Trailer
This is the official movie trailer of The Expendables starring Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren, Mickey Rourke, Bruce Willis and Arnold Schwarzenegger. An all-star action movie cast officially releasing on August 13, 2010.
Pandorum Official Movie Trailer in HD
The Plot:
Two crew members are stranded on a spacecraft and quickly - and horrifically - realize they are not alone. Two astronauts awaken in a hyper-sleep chamber aboard a seemingly abandoned spacecraft. It's pitch black, they are disoriented, and the only sound is a low rumble and creak from the belly of the ship. They can't remember anything: Who are they? What is their mission? With Lt. Payton staying behind to guide him via radio transmitter, Cpl. Bower ventures deep into the ship and begins to uncover a terrifying reality. Slowly the spacecraft's shocking, deadly secrets are revealed...and the astronauts find their own survival is more important than they could ever have imagined.
The Stars:
Dennis Quaid as Payton
Ben Foster as Bower
Cam Gigandet as Gallo
Antje Traue as Nadia
Cung Le as Manh
Eddie Rousev as Leland
Norman Reedus as Shepard
André Hennicke as Hunter Leader
Friederike Kempter as Evalon
Niels-Bruno Schmidt as Insane Officer 'Eden'
Jonah Mohmand as Childhunter
Delphine Chuillot as Young Bower's Mother
Wotan Wilke Möhring as Young Bower's Father
Julian Rappe as Young Bower
Domenico D'Ambrosio as Wounded Officer 'Eden'
Movie Critics Reviews:
Boston Globe (Justin Elias) -Magnificent desolation - Buzz Aldrin’s lyrical description of the moonscape, as seen from its lonesome surface - has inspired poets and artists. But to science-fiction filmmakers and writers, the phrase usually inspires terror. Travel to Mars, the stars, and beyond often risks a killer case of space madness. So it goes, screamingly, in “Pandorum,’’ a highly effective sci-fi thriller set during a 2174 mission to colonize a far-off, newly discovered Earth-like planet. More disconcerting are the dreadful growls coming from deep within the craft’s shadowy metallic corridors. Could these be symptoms of what the movie calls Pandorum madness - the demons of the mind, demons mutated and escaped from a genetic storage facility, or something worse? “Pandorum’’ is a dark, disquieting dream worth watching out for.
Los Angeles Times (Glenn Whipp) -The sci-fi-horror hybrid "Pandorum" keeps its audience in the dark -- literally and figuratively -- far too long to be of much use besides as a patience-trying exercise in reference spotting. The movie owns a few interesting ideas, as well as an obvious devotion to the "Alien" franchise, but director Christian Alvart dishes out the dystopia in such bite-sized increments that you'll experience the titular cabin-fever sensation long before the film's characters do.
Alvart and screenwriter Travis Milloy aim to disorient from the get-go and, to their credit, establish a pretty decent puzzler of a premise. Two spaceship crew members, Bower (Ben Foster) and Payton (Dennis Quaid), wake up from a long cryogenic snooze completely disoriented. They don't know their mission or their location and have only vague memories of life back on Earth.
Jennifer's Body Official Movie Trailer
This is the official movie trailer of Jennifer's body starring Megan Fox.
The Plot:
Written by Diablo Cody, Jennifer's Body is a 2009 sexy, comedy horror film directed by Karyn Kusama. Jennifer Fox stars in the lead role as Jennifer who is a typical high school cheerleader who has been the object of most males desires. In an act of desperation to land a record deal, Jennifer participate in a Satanic ritual by a rock band but horribly turns into a demon feeding off her male classmates in High School.
Her best friend, Needy tries to stop her demonic acts of seducing then killing her fellow students.
The Stars:
Megan Fox as Jennifer Check
Amanda Seyfried as Needy Lesnicky
Johnny Simmons as Chip
Adam Brody as Nikolai Wolf
Sal Cortez as Chas
Ryan Levine as Mick
Juan Riedinger as Dirk
Colin Askey as Keyboardist
Chris Pratt as Roman Duda
Juno Ruddell as Officer Warzak
Kyle Gallner as Colin Gray
Josh Emerson as Jonas Konelle
J.K. Simmons as Mr. Wroblewski
Amy Sedaris as Needy's Mom
Cynthia Stevenson as Chip's Mom
Movie Critics Review:
Boston Globe (Ty Burr) -The haters are already out in force for this one, storming the nation’s multiplexes with torches if their blogs are to be believed. Honestly, the movie’s not that terrible. That doesn’t mean it’s very good, though. “Jennifer’s Body’’ falls into the dispiriting category of dumb movies made by smart people, in this case a glibly clever writer and a talented director who think a few wisecracks are enough to subvert the teen horror genre.
Chicago Tribune (Geoff Berkshire) -A lot of strong elements that never really add up. Fox is savvy about using her sex appeal to her advantage, and gets some great dialogue from Cody to help give her more life on screen than she’s ever had before (ironic, since she’s playing someone undead). Seyfried’s performance goes beyond the standard horror heroine to uncover the inner life of a teen girl who hates her best friend whether either of them know it or not. Simmons is a promising male standout in a female-dominated project. And the first time we see Jennifer post-possession—when she’s caked in blood, spewing spiny black vomit on a kitchen floor—the movie seems set to deliver on its “Heathers” meets “Evil Dead” potential. But the tension never escalates, the stakes are raised in only perfunctory ways, there’s no connection with Jennifer’s victims and we never get a real feeling for Jennifer herself. Is her story tragic? Hilarious? Weirdly inspiring? It could have been, but instead “Jennifer’s Body” plays it safe and familiar. Juno would not be pleased.
