The biggest upcoming movies, 2012. In short, this year will be the
largest ever for comic book movies and the number of exciting titles
easily blows last year out of the water. Assuming your taste is
mainstream, these are odds on to be the 20 best movies of 2012:
The Dark Knight Rises
Starring: Christian Bale, Tom Hardy, Anne Hathaway, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Gary Oldman
Director: Christopher Nolan
Release Date: 20 July 2012

It
was a brave move naming a Batman film ‘The Dark Knight’, since it
didn’t have the word ‘Batman’ in it. There’s nothing bold about the
title here. That aside, this is easily the year′s mainstream highlight,
the film that is going to dominate coverage. The plot involves the
whole of Gotham descending into anarchy and mob rule, while Batman is
put out of action. Tom Hardy look imposing as Bane but his vocals seem
hard to follow, Anne Hathaway plays an angry-looking Catwoman who
appears to steal from the rich because she passionately hates them,
Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays a beat cop and Marion Cotillard plays a
Wayne Enterprises board member. Director Christopher Nolan has made it
clear this is the final chapter for his Batman, so expect fireworks and
major character death, probably. Can’t wait to see it.
The Avengers
Starring: Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffalo
Director: Joss Whedon
Release Date: 4 May 2012

Running
The Dark Knight a close second for hype will be The Avengers. The
confirmed line-up includes Iron Man, Thor, Captain America, Nick Fury,
Black Widow, and Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner). Ruffalo is replacing Ed
Norton as The Hulk. But who are they going to fight? It’s a challenge
to find a credible threat that requires their combined effort – it
looks like they’re turning to outer space for that, with a bit of Loki
megalomania thrown in too. Director Joss Whedon has a daunting task on
his hands.
The Amazing Spider-Man
Starring: Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Rhys Ifans, Irrfan Khan, Martin Sheen
Director: Marc Webb
Release Date: 4 July 2012

Spider-Man
gets a slightly uncalled for reboot that takes him back to high school.
27-year-old Andrew Garfield (The Social Network) is the new Peter
Parker and Mary Jane is nowhere to be seen, replaced by Gwen Stacey
(Emma Stone). This time Spider-Man has to face down against the Lizard
(Ifans) and the “Proto-Goblin,” (Khan) a test subject of Norman
Osborn’s experimentations. Martin Sheen is Uncle Ben, who presumably
has to be shot dead again. The director of 500 Days Of Summer takes
over from trilogy director Sam Raimi. They’re also going for a much
lower budget, so expect more character work, less morphing sand.
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Starring: Martin Freeman, James Nesbitt, Richard Armitage, Sir Ian McKellen, Andy Serkis
Director: Peter Jackson
Release Date: 14 December 2012

Hobbit
Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) journeys to the Lonely Mountain
accompanied by a group of dwarves to reclaim a treasure taken from them
by the dragon Smaug. The LOTRings prequels are full steam ahead in New
Zealand, with Peter Jackson in the director’s chair and union troubles
put behind them. James Nesbitt will play Bofur, one of the main
dwarves. Sir Ian McKellen returns as Gandalf. Others returning include
Andy Serkis, Cate Blanchett, Orlando Bloom, Ian Holm, Hugo Weaving,
Elijah Wood, and Christopher Lee. The movie will be split, with chapter
two (the literally-titled The Hobbit: There and Back Again) released
December of the following year.
The Bourne Legacy
Starring: Jeremy Renner, Rachel Weisz, Edward Norton, Joan Allen
Director: Tony Gilroy
Release Date: 3 August 2012

Matt
Damon’s not in it. The character of Jason Bourne is not in it. Damon
and previous director Greengrass were determined to end the series with
the third movie, but the studio wants to continue the franchise, as it
has made them too much money. This is not a sequel or a reboot, but a
standalone story about another agent (Renner) trained by the murderous
shadow government operation Treadstone, who went through experiences
similar to Bourne’s or the character played by Clive Owen in the
original movie. Rachel Weisz plays the love interest. Edward Norton is
the antagonist. Matt Damon is not ruling out returning to the series at
a later point, so this could act as something of a set-up for that. New
director Gilroy adapted the original trilogy and directed Michael
Clayton, so it’s actually in pretty decent hands.
Skyfall (Bond 23)
Starring: Daniel Craig, Javier Bardem, Judi Dench, Ralph Fiennes, Albert Finney
Director: Sam Mendes
Release Date: 9 November 2012

MGM’s
bankruptcy troubles are behind them so Bond is finally back in
production. The plot sees him question his loyalty to M when her past
actions bring serious consequences to the present. After MI6 itself is
attacked, Bond must seek out and eliminate the threat. Bardem plays the
main villian. Fiennes’ role is undisclosed. Young Ben Whishaw is the
new Q. China will be one of the locations. Sam Mendes (American Beauty,
Jarhead) directs from a script by Wade and Purvis, who’ve been the main
writers on every Bond since TWINE. Quantum was a stumble from Casino
Royale, taking the freshness and packing it back into the Bond formula.
Hopefully they have learnt from their mistakes. 2012 will be the 50th
anniversary of Dr. No and the franchise.
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