• One Billion Bats

    In the Los Angeles Times' Hero Complex blog, Geoff Boucher has a lengthy conversation with Dark Knight director Christopher Nolan, whose superhero epic is teetering on the verge of making a billion dollars.  Considering that's just U.S. and foreign box office, and doesn't even take into account merchandising and the vast sums it's going to rake in once it comes to home video, that's the kind of cash that even Bruce Wayne would greet with a low whistle.  Nolan, though, if he isn't exactly taking the news in stride, at least isn't letting it go to his head:  "I can't get my arms around it, to be frank.  It's mystifying.  It's terrific, but at the same time, it's a little abstract, the numbers are so big...there's something liberating in knowing that my next film, whatever it is, isn't going to make as much money.  I don't have to try for years."

    Wait a minute..."whatever it is"?  Surely it's going to be a third Batman movie.  Surely Nolan isn't going to walk away from a franchise that netted widespread critical acclaim and a ten-figure box office return, right?  The man himself is cagey on the subject, saying that if there's a compelling enough story to tell, he'll be on board, but noting that no such story has yet revealed itself, and asking the very sensible question:  "How many good third movies in a franchise can people name?"

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  • And "Duke" Will Not Be Played By Johnny Depp With a Fishing Cap and a Cigarette Holder

    You learn the strangest things on this job. Not all of them are really worth an entire blog entry, but occasionally, the seriousness with which people take entirely frivolous aspects of what is, after all, a popular entertainment medium results in little pieces of dimestore surrealism that we just can’t keep to ourselves. Take the upcoming G.I. Joe movie in development at Paramount: for some reason, rumors have been circulating, especially among right-wing political blogs, that the film will be some sort of celebration of political correctness featuring a denatured Joe Team in thrall to Euro-weenie bureaucrats. How this rumor got started is beyond us, but it did lead Hasbro, who owns the G.I. Joe trademark, to issue a ‘clarification’ statement to fans containing this great moment in denials: “The G.I. Joe team will not be based in Brussels.” Elsewhere in weird movie news, the New York Times carries a profile of Heath Ledger this week which reveals that while filming The Dark Knight, the actor keeps a “Joker diary” containing, among other things, a list of things Ledger believes the supervillain would find amusing. Like AIDS. Leonard Pierce



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