With a rising career like few other directors, Ben Wheatley has given us one of the best horror thrillers of the decade thus far (Kill List), a love story like no other (Sightseers), a trippy black-and-white Civil War drama (A Field in England), a flat-out masterpiece (High-Rise), and his latest film, the star-studded, Martin Scorsese-produced Free Fire was recently picked up by Alchemy for a 2016 release. For a new project, he’s now set to remake a classic — one which has already been remade (twice, technically).
According to Deadline, he’s set to direct and co-write (with frequent collaborator Amy Jump) another remake of The Wages of Fear. First coming to screens by Henri-Georges Clouzot in 1953, the adaptation of Georges Arnaud’s novel follows a group of men who dangerously transport a shipment of nitroglycerine through the jungle for one of the most intense experience one can witness in cinema.
According to Deadline, he’s set to direct and co-write (with frequent collaborator Amy Jump) another remake of The Wages of Fear. First coming to screens by Henri-Georges Clouzot in 1953, the adaptation of Georges Arnaud’s novel follows a group of men who dangerously transport a shipment of nitroglycerine through the jungle for one of the most intense experience one can witness in cinema.
- 11/17/2015
- by Leonard Pearce
- The Film Stage
Saddle up, rangers. Stills We Love‘s gonna take a ride out west to Fort Bowie.
You can never go wrong with a little bit of western, especially one like this. Look at it:
Click for the full-on largeness.
This dad-blasted still says it all, pardner! A perfect tableau of B-western conflict, complete with cowering heroine in the middle of the action. Fort Bowie is one of over 25 programmers cranked out by Aubrey Schenck and Howard W. Koch’s Bel-Air Productions for United Artists in the 1950s. They were all pretty slick considering the low budgets. This one was shot on location in Kanab, Utah and is worth a look when it pops up on the indispensable Starz Westerns Channel. John Ford favorite Ben Johnson, in a rare leading role, takes time out from the suicide mission that cuckolded commander Kent Taylor has sent him on to save Taylor’s...
You can never go wrong with a little bit of western, especially one like this. Look at it:
Click for the full-on largeness.
This dad-blasted still says it all, pardner! A perfect tableau of B-western conflict, complete with cowering heroine in the middle of the action. Fort Bowie is one of over 25 programmers cranked out by Aubrey Schenck and Howard W. Koch’s Bel-Air Productions for United Artists in the 1950s. They were all pretty slick considering the low budgets. This one was shot on location in Kanab, Utah and is worth a look when it pops up on the indispensable Starz Westerns Channel. John Ford favorite Ben Johnson, in a rare leading role, takes time out from the suicide mission that cuckolded commander Kent Taylor has sent him on to save Taylor’s...
- 7/26/2011
- by Danny
- Trailers from Hell
This elaborate second remake of the French classic Wages of Fear (following Violent Road, a 1958 Howard W. Koch B-picture starring Brian Keith) suffered at the boxoffice from its supernatural-sounding title (especially coming from the director of The Exorcist), which obscured its origins as a nail-biting suspense classic. Two tough, grueling hours that grab you by the throat and won't let go.
- 4/13/2010
- Trailers from Hell
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