Web of Media - The Official Magazines Thread

WIDESCREEN Magazine (Germany) - January, 2007 (On sale December 6)

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Preview of the year 2007 including Spider-Man 3 with brand new pic on cover


Source: http://www.widescreen-online.de/?menu=0301
 
CINÉ LIVE Magazine (France) - Issue 108 January, 2007

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Article and pic from Spider-Man 3 plus a CD-ROM with trailers including Spideys


Source: www.cinelive.com
 
THE WORKS Magazine - Issue A12 (On sale December 13, 2006)

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We take a sneaky look at what will be hitting our cinema screens, TVs, iPods, bookshelves and consoles in just a matter of months. From the hotly anticipated Spider-Man 3 onwards…

…Perhaps a reported budget ranging from $250-$300m, easily the most expensive film in history, has been something of an inducement to be as hospitable as possible to those whose posteriors will be filling the seats on those vital first two weekends (the percentage of audience attendance ‘drop-off’ in the second week effectively deciding a movie’s future) in May next year. Add the astronomical marketing costs and you’re looking at a film that might need to make the Premiership’s yearly wage bill just to break even.

Even with these sorts of financial pressures, you wouldn’t imagine Sony’s spider sense would be tingling too hard about any impending threats to the second sequel’s prospects. The first two films have a combined worldwide box office total of – adopting my best Dr Evil pose – one and a half billion dollars, which doesn’t even include DVD sales and merchandising. You have to wonder whether there’ll be any fast food franchise tie-ins with this one though. ‘Try the tasty new venom burger!’ doesn’t sound too appetizing.

Whatever happens, the movie will certainly be rammed with action. As the trailer shows, there’s a hell of a lot of danger flying around. Most notably there’s some giant sandy fists emanating from muscular Flint Marko (played by Sideways’ Oscar nominated Thomas Haden Church, who worked out for over a year in preparation), a thug who might be the true killer of Peter Parker’s beloved Uncle Ben.

It is Peter’s new thirst for vengeance against Marko, transformed into the Sandman by a scientific accident (aren’t they always?), that taps into his darker emotions, as a vicious subway brawl illustrates – Spidey grinding Sandy’s face into a passing train is not acceptable superhero etiquette. As Aunt May says in the movie, “Revenge is like a poison and before you know it, it can turn you into something ugly.”

by Jason Caro
Source: http://www.visimag.com/theworks/a12_display.htm
http://www.visimag.com/theworks/a12_feat01.htm
 
XPOSÉ Magazine - Special Issue #31

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Movies 2007 Preview
What'll chart, and what will flop? We take a look at the must-see movies of 2007, including Pirates of the Caribbean 3, Transformers, Spider-Man 3 and, of course, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix…



Source: http://www.visimag.com/xpose/xs31_display.htm
 
CINEMANIA (Spain) - December, 2006

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The magazine also includes an extensive report about the future of the film industry and defines the 35 changes that the industry will undergo in 2007: from the release of Spider-Man 3 and the feature length movie of The Simpsons to the latest consumer technology products that will change our film viewing habits

Source: http://www.prisa.es/articulo.html?xref=20061205prsprsnot_1&type=Ten&anchor=priprenot
 
KIDSCREEN Magazine - November/December, 2006

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December 1, 2006 - KidScreen Magazine

Licensing

Sakar focuses on kids licenses

by Lana Castleman

page 23

There's been a lot of ink spilled in the pages of the trade and consumer pubs about the growth of the youth electronics category in the last two years, and if the sales performance of 30-year-old Sakar International is any indication the market is continuing to expand at a good clip. The Edison, New Jersey-based electronics manufacturer has seen a 20% increase in sales of its kids products (it has a 95% market share in kids digital cameras) over the past three years, and is looking to keep the momentum going with its newly minted licensing division.

Liza Abrams, who worked most recently for 4Kids Entertainment in New York, now heads up the venture as director of licensing and is charged with cherry picking kids entertainment IPs, and sports and brand licenses to pad out Sakar's product lineup. Along with inking a Major League Baseball deal, Sakar has picked up rights for Shrek 3, Spider-Man 3 and classic Spider-Man.

In Q1 2007, Sakar's bringing the big green ogre and the webbed one to its mass retail distribution network that includes Wal-Mart, Target and Toys 'R' Us. Lead Shrek product the Nature Swamp Kit is an innovative application of the license that draws on Shrek's home base for inspiration and meshes hi- and low-tech items. It comes in several versions and green (Shrek) and pink (Fiona) colorways, ranging in price from US$11 to US$21. The kits include combinations of a tent, magnifying glass, flashlight, binoculars and, perhaps most importantly for amateur entomologists, plastic bugs.

As for Spider-Man, Sakar has digital cameras and an array of flashlights - from a basic model to a souped up number that comes with different lenses that project 3-D images on walls and ceilings - on deck to support the film. Classic Spider-Man, meanwhile, gets his own spy-oriented line, which includes walkie-talkies, binoculars and tricked-out devices.

Looking ahead to the rest of 2007 and 2008, Abrams says she's on the hunt for a solid tween girls license, a few preschool properties and perhaps another event film. The company has cut its teeth in the tween girl electronics category by executing several private-label lines for the likes of retailers such as Limited Too. Digital cameras have been the staple and Abrams adds the company works continually with software developers to create different camera kits that appeal to girls' creative sides. For example, there's a scrapbooking camera and another that prints photos as stickers.

Not to be left out on the preschool side, Sakar has a proprietary line of products called My First, which includes beginner microscopes, digital cameras and flashlights. Naturally, Abrams says Sakar is looking at expanding the product assortment for both demos with the right properties.
Source: http://www.kidscreen.com/articles/magazine/20061201/sakar.html
 
hey all dont know if this has been posted sorry if it has, but i was at 7-11 just now looking at the videogame mags, when i saw a cover of some magazine called "W" with cameron diaz on it. shes gorgeous so i picked it up and looked at the cover and it also said tobey maguire was in it. so i rifled thru it and found a cppl pages i think 3 or 4 on him, didnt read it tho as the clerk was watching me lol anyways if anybody picks it up let me know. thanx..
 
FILM REVIEW Magazine (UK) - February, 2007

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2007 Preview
• While 2006 might not have been a vintage year at the movies, 2007 is already shaping up to be a cinema-goer’s dream. From Spider Man 3 to Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End, to the long-awaited big screen version of Phillip Pullman’s best-seller The Golden Compass we look forward to the movies that are all set to rock your world in the year ahead



Source: http://www.visimag.com/filmreview/f202_display.htm
 
CINEMANIA Magazine (Spain) - January, 2007

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This coming year promises to be jam packed with great films. The January issue of the Spanish film magazine Cinemanía looks at all the film phenomena of 2007. Several major feature films will be premiering over the next few months, including the three projects featured on the front cover: the new Harry Potter film and part three of the Spider-Man and Pirates of the Caribbean trilogies.


Source: http://www.prisa.es/articulo.html?xref=20070110prsprsnot_1&type=Ten&anchor=priprenot
 
PROSPECT Magazine (UK) - January, 2007 Issue# 130

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Widescreen
Why has mainstream cinema suddenly become so dark? The obvious reason is 9/11, but ageing audiences and Asian influences have also played a part

Mark Cousins

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Mark Cousins is a film critic

As Prospect's multiplex moocher, I would like to report a trend in mainstream cinema: it has darkened, both thematically and psychologically. The trailer for Spider-Man 3 shows that in the next instalment, arachno-man merges with a black creature from another world. The film's tagline is "the battle within." In 2005, Star Wars: Episode III depicted Anakin Skywalker's own battle within. The same year, Bruce Wayne in Batman Begins saw his parents slain and had a traumatic experience in a dark cave, setting him on his, and the film's, tenebrous course. Also in 2005, The War of the Worlds was so visually dark that cinemas put up signs explaining that the projection wasn't at fault. The Passion of the Christ (2004) was one of the most downbeat mainstream films ever made. Currently showing in the multiplexes are The Prestige, which is stygian in the extreme, and Casino Royale, which treats us to 007's battle within.

It was a surprise to discover that the movie Bond even had a within, but there's no doubt that the tone of mainstream cinema has darkened: nearly all its franchise characters—those heroes who blow in the direction of cinematic and social prevailing winds—have undergone traumas of late. Sunny...


Restricted Content
This article is available to online subscribers only


Source: http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=8168
 

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