Posts Tagged ‘Nimrod Antal’

Wednesday’s Important News: Predators’ cast, “What about Darfive,” and RZA finally joins Todd Phillips

// Wednesday, October 7th, 2009 by John Lichman

Oh snap, there’s news and today is officially a day. Let’s rock it:

  • -Adrien Brody will lead the cast of the Nimrod Antal directed, Robert Rodriguez produced/written Predators. [Current]
  • -A look into the legitimate world of matching an actor up with a charity proves the scene from Bruno was sadly real. [Indie Eye]
  • -RZA joins Todd Phillips’ Due Date with Robert Downey Jr. and Zach Galifianakis. [Variety]
  • -Samuel L. Jackson will star in the adaptation of Same Kind of Different as Me. Whatever. [Variety]
  • -Paul Schrader is still making a Bollywood film. It’s called Xtreme City. Can’t be the YUKIO MISHIMA SONG I made up, though. [Variety]
  • -You noticed those last three links were all from Variety? Why? Because…it’s the spice of life. [Instant Rimshot]
  • -Go away. Listen to the fox.

-John Lichman

Mini Trailer Time: Armored, Trailer 2

// Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009 by Brett Erlich

The legacy of Nimród Antal is a varied one. He brought us Kontroll, then Vacancy and soon he will give us Predators.

Before that, Armored will be released on December 4th. Now take a gander at the second theatrical trailer for it, and even the first:

[Apple]

-Brett Erlich

Who is Nimród Antal?

// Thursday, July 2nd, 2009 by John Lichman

If you’re a fanboy or sci-fi genre nerd, you’re likely sitting at your computer asking yourself this very question. Ain’t it Cool broke last night that Antal, whose thriller Armored comes in December, was Robert Rodriguez’ choice to direct a “reboot/reimagining/re-verbing” of Predators.  While many commenters wondered who’d name their kid Nimrod, but who would?

Antal emerged in 2004 with Kontroll, which took the meanial job of a Budapest subway worker and turned it into a dark comedy as there may or may not be someone throwing people in front of trains. But Bulcsú can’t tell the difference since he never leaves the underground tunnels and could be the one killing people. It starts with a descent into the subterranean setting and ends with an overt ascension to freedom.

Antal’s work can be filled with a sly humor, but when forced to put on the bright lights for mainstream affairs, you wind up with Vacancy: a two-bit thriller that did nothing more than capitalize on the Saw franchise of pretty people being hunted by sick perverts. But Antal can even make this look decent. And his armored car heist story looks fine.

So who is Nimród Antal?

Well, we’ll figure it out once he’s in Austin, shooting CGI predators in the back of Robert Rodriguez’ house.

-John Lichman
Img: Paul Hawthorne/Getty Images