Of course it would be Nolan doing the hosting. You can just see it in his work that he wishes he made Heat.
Yep. But Heat meets Batman was a great fucking idea.
Of course it would be Nolan doing the hosting. You can just see it in his work that he wishes he made Heat.
Can I at least get a VHS version of Michael Mann's The Keep? I figured DVD was asking too much, and Blu Ray being right out.
Mann purposely puts as many former cops/criminals in his films as possible, usually in smaller roles. Trejo has stated that he helped consult with some of the robbery scenes (he used to be a stick up man waaaaay back in the day).Greatest Polar of all times... Perfection.
Fun fact : Danny Trejo (no listed in the Op cast) is playing a character named Trejo. Must be handy ^^
Danny Trejo said:You just make it look real. You show somebody how to hold a gun. You show somebody how to walk into a bank. You show somebody how to take control. Everybody has an idea of what an armed robbery is supposed to be, and the reality is, you have to scare people up until a point. If you scare them too much, you will lose control, because they will freak out. Thats the last thing you want. So some people will come in, All right, you motherfuckers! Everybody get up against the fucking and its like, Dude, theyre going to blow. You understand what Im saying? But if you walk up to somebody and say, Look, Ive got a gun, and if you make one move, Ill kill you. All of a sudden, they take that in, okay, theyve taken that into their senses, and theyre saying, I better not move.
Mann purposely puts as many former cops/criminals in his films as possible, usually in smaller roles. Trejo has stated that he helped consult with some of the robbery scenes (he used to be a stick up man waaaaay back in the day).
Hahahahaha.AVC: Did you take acting classes?
DT: In 1985 it was a little different. I would just go with the extras and the director would see me. I was always Inmate No. 1, and I always had one line like, Kill em all. [Laughs.] It was like, I can do this. I remember a director handed me a shotgun and he said, Kick in this door and take control. There was a poker game going inside, and the director said there would be a couple of stunt people inside. He said to improvise. So I kick in the door, somebody jumps up, I bash them with the shotgun, and I ask this guy, Oh, you wanna die, huh? This lady starts screaming, and I put this gun right in her face. So the director yells, Cut! Cut! God, Danny, where did you study? I said, Let me see. Vons. Safeway. Thrifty Mart. [Laughs.] So all this stuff I was doing, I just knew. Youve got to remember, I was Inmate No. 1 for the first five years of my career. So shit, I know how to be an inmate.
that's why everytime Michael Mann comes out with a new movie I'm looking forward to the shootout scenes the most.
The last great Michael Mann movie.
Ok second last great, Collateral was amazing.
The last great Michael Mann movie.
Ok second last great, Collateral was amazing.
AndVincent Hanna: What are you, a monk?
Neil McCauley: I have a woman.
Vincent Hanna: What do you tell her?
Neil McCauley: I tell her I'm a salesman.
Vincent Hanna: So then, if you spot me coming around that corner... you just gonna walk out on this woman? Not say good bye?
Neil McCauley: That's the discipline.
Vincent Hanna: That's pretty vacant, you know.
Neil McCauley: Yeah, it is what it is. It's that or we both better go do something else, pal.
Vincent Hanna: I don't know how to do anything else.
Neil McCauley: Neither do I.
Vincent Hanna: I don't much want to either.
Neil McCauley: Neither do I.
BonusNeil McCauly said:Don't let yourself get attached to anything you are not willing to walk out on in 30 seconds flat if you feel the heat around the corner.
Alan Marciano: Why'd I get mixed up with that bitch?
Vincent Hanna: Cause she's got a great ass... and you got your head all the way up it! Ferocious, aren't I? When I think of asses, a woman's ass, something comes out of me.
The best part about that scene is, that was an improve line by Al Pachino and Hank Azaria didn't know he was going to say that shit.Bonus
Mann purposely puts as many former cops/criminals in his films as possible, usually in smaller roles. Trejo has stated that he helped consult with some of the robbery scenes (he used to be a stick up man waaaaay back in the day).
DT: Steven Seagal. [Laughs.] He was cool. He’s all macho, “I got bigger nuts than you.” But he was cool. He was all right. He kept trying to get me to do my own stunts. I went, “Ah, hell no. They got this guy who looks just like me.” At times he would get overzealous, you know what I mean? You do your own stunts as an actor, and you end up getting hurt. It’s not your job. You’ve got stunt guys. Stunt guys make a lot of money.
DT: Desperado. That was the one. Boy, that thing was amazing, because that character was so strong, and never said a word. I kept asking Robert, “Come on, give me a line, man,” and he wouldn’t. “No, no. This is heavy. I’m telling you, Danny, you’re so strong.” “Give me a line!” I’m screaming at him. “No.” So, after the movie came out, we were in front of Sony, we were talking in this big group over at Sony, and somebody raises their hand and says, “You know, Danny, in that movie, your character was so strong and never said a line. Was that an actor’s choice?” I looked right in Robert’s eye and said, “Yes it was.” He gave me the finger. [Laughs.]
Hate to be such a broken record about this director but The Insider, Miami Vice, Blackhat and Ali were all great movies. 2 of which (if not more of them) I'd put over collateral easy.
Al Pacino finally admitted it: Vincent Hanna, the dedicated Los Angeles police detective he plays in Michael Manns 1995 crime saga Heat, is strung out on cocaine throughout the film.
Talking character specifics, De Niro spoke about visual cues. At the onset, I thought there should be that difference in the characters in terms of how they come off, what colors theyre in, he said.
Fox Home Entertainment is targeting early 2017 for a release of the restoration, which looked incredible, Spinottis cityscape imagery as dazzling as ever. Indeed, Heat maintains an interesting place in Manns filmography, before he took the digital plunge and captured the nighttime look of the city so accurately in Collateral. Its built with more classical imagery, kissed by lens flares, painting a dream-like atmosphere that is nevertheless a dark place where men break the law and others hunt them for it.
I'll definitely have to check out all 4 of those as Collateral is one of my favorite movies ever to re-watch. An all time great Cruise performance.
Heat is amazing, really happy to give the 4K Blu-Ray a spin later this year.
Screening was last night. Variety posted a summary of the chat.
The Academy's twitter said "look for videos soon."
Screening was last night. Variety posted a summary of the chat.
The Academy's twitter said "look for videos soon."
The Insider is an easy choice. As is Ali.
I love Miami Vice but that's the more polarizing one. Whether or not you liked that kind of dictates whether you will even tolerate blackhat lol
Early 2017 for the bluray then? Dope.
Well damn...I was on the fence about buying a bluray to finally sit down and watch this movie. Should I wait now?
GOAT
Though it was kind of disappointing to find out that De Niro and Pacino never did do any filming together.
I'll watch it on my PS4 Pro.
I'll watch it on my PS4 Pro.
Huh? They had scenes together.