@Smorock, ako ti se dopao Afro, skini Samurai 7, takodje je radila animacijaska kuca Gonzo (radili Afro S.), rimejk Kurosavinih 7 Samuraja, ali u cyber punk stilu.
Black Snake Moan, je bas zabavan film, Jackson po obicaju odlican, a i lepo covek peva i svira gitaru. Ricci se dobro snasla u ulozi nimfomanke, heh.
Cak mi je i Justin bio podnosljiv.
Rock & Rule (1983)CODE
A malevolent rock star kidnaps a female singer to force her to participate in the summoning of a demon and her band must help her stop him.
IMDBZanimljivost i cinjenice:
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Centering on rock and roll music, the film includes songs by Cheap Trick, Chris Stein and Debbie Harry of the pop group Blondie, Lou Reed, Iggy Pop, and Earth, Wind & Fire. The story takes place in a post-apocalyptic United States populated by mutated humanoid animals. Protagonists and antagonists alike are rock musicians in this movie.
Rock & Rule was Nelvana's first animated feature film, as well as the first of its kind to be produced entirely in Canada. The film spent several years in production and underwent many changes from the original concept, which was titled Drats! and aimed for children. The cost of production, $8 million in studio resources, nearly put Nelvana out of business.
The animation was of unusually high quality for the era (it began production in 1979), and the special effects were mostly photographic techniques, as computer graphics were in their infancy. Computers were used to generate only a few images in the film.
Because of scenes involving drug use, implied devil worship, and mild sexuality, the film could only be marketed to an adult audience. It performed poorly at the box office (with only $30,000 in ticket sales), and no soundtrack album was ever released (though some of the songs appeared as B-sides on subsequent albums by the musicians involved with the film). Commentary on the Special Edition DVD partially lays the blame for the film's poor performance in the U.S. on MGM. The DVD claims that management at MGM changed and the new overseers of the project were not as enthusiastic about the film as their predecessors. This caused script revisions and other changes which damaged the flow of the story, delayed its release and raised costs. In the end, MGM was still unhappy with the film and gave it a small release in North America with next to nothing in terms of advertising.