YM! Posted September 26, 2018 Share Posted September 26, 2018 (edited) @cayommagazine The soundtrack for High School Musical 4: Reunion will arrive June 22nd. The soundtrack features a whopping 23 songs from the movie. Spoiler Bop to the Top… Kiersey Clemons, Monique Coleman Scream… Zac Efron I Don’t Dance..Hugh Jackman, Corbin Bleu Fabulous… Ashley Tisdale Start of Something New… Lin-Manuel Miranda, Vanessa Hudgens The Boys are Back… Zac Efron, Corbin Bleu You are the Music in Me… Ben Platt, Lucas Grabeel Start of Something New...Lin-Manuel Miranda, Vanessa Hudgens A Night To Remember... Ashley Tisdale We’re All In This Together/All For One/High School Musical (End Credits)...Full Cast+Christian Bale in a cameo Original: Bring Back The Drama… Ashley Tisdale, Ben Platt No Office Space… Zac Efron Who Am I?... Lucas Grabeel, Olesya Rulin Slacking On Packing...Zac Efron, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Vanessa Hudgens What We’re Fighting For...Zac Efron, Vanessa Hudgens, Lucas Gabreel, Ashley Tisdale, Corbin Bleu, Monique Coleman, Kiersey Clemons, Hugh Jackman, Lin-Manuel Miranda Missing You...Vanessa Hudgens Landslide...Kiersey Clemons, Hugh Jackman What We Could Be…Lucas Gabreel, Ben Platt Dreaming of Tomorrow...Zac Efron, Vanessa Hudgens Before Our Dreams Came True..Ashley Tisdale, Corbin Bleu, Monique Coleman New Beginnings...Zac Efron, Vanessa Hudgens, Lucas Grabeel, Ashley Tisdale, Corbin Bleu, Monique Coleman, Ben Platt, Olesya Rulin, Hugh Jackman, Kiersey Clemons, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Austin Butler, Chris Warren, Jr., Kaycee Stroh Edited September 26, 2018 by YourMother the Edgelord 1 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ezen Baklattan Posted September 26, 2018 Share Posted September 26, 2018 @CayomMagazine Lewis Pullman joins the cast of Starlit Highway. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
YM! Posted September 27, 2018 Share Posted September 27, 2018 @cayommagazine Endless Animation is working on an upcoming rap musical with Kendrick Lamar and Lin Manuel Miranda who will write the songs. The latter helped penned the screenplay for it alongside Aaron and Jordan Kandell (Moana), and Adrian Molina (Coco). The former is expected to co-direct the film along with Peter Ramsey. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Xillix Posted September 28, 2018 Share Posted September 28, 2018 (edited) FLIGHTS OF FIRE Official Teaser Trailer Spoiler A hospital. Small, understaffed. It’s the middle of the night. She is supposed to be sleeping, but a little blonde girl, seven years old, is sneaking down the hallway. She passes by the door to room after room, reading the numbers, counting her way up to the correct one. But she needn’t bother. The person she wants to visit is still awake. A woman’s raw, ragged cough cuts through the quiet. The little girl recognizes it immediately, and it leads her to her destination. Then the hallway of a cramped, dirty house. A Hispanic girl in her preteens walks slowly, each step careful and soft on the hardwood floor. She passes by her parents’ bedroom, where she can hear her father snoring. After each step she takes, she pauses, wrought with anxiety, listening until the next unsteady wheeze reassures her, for a few seconds more, that he is still asleep. The blonde girl opens the door to the patient’s room. Inside, sitting up on the bed, is a woman in a yellowed hospital gown (Margot Robbie). She is in her twenties, but disease has ravaged her appearance, leaving her looking gaunt and frail. Still, she is happy to see the girl. The child looks at her with concern as she tries to suppress another cough, beckoning the girl toward her. The older, dark-haired girl has made it into the kitchen. A cold, half-eaten dinner sits on the table, a can of beer overturned next to it, its contents staining the tablecloth. It hasn’t been white for a good long while anyway. With the utmost of care, she wraps her small fingers around the handle of the refrigerator door, pulling gently. The light inside flickers off and on. There’s hardly anything inside for it to illuminate anyway. The woman and her young friend sit together on the hospital bed. From the small table next to it, the woman retrieves an old shoebox full of photographs. The little girl removes the lid excitedly, and the woman laughs, searching through the prints to find some she hasn’t shown her yet. The other girl gets herself a glass for a drink of water. She doesn’t want to risk opening and closing a cabinet, so she just uses an unwashed one from the sink. She nervously turns on the tap, turning the knob as little as she can to avoid a noisy gush of water. She stands and stares at the clear, narrow stream of water as it gradually fills the cup. The woman and blonde girl smile, looking over vacation photos from the shoebox. They show the woman in happier times, wearing a modest pink blouse and long white skirt, leaning against the railing of a dock alongside a picturesque lake. Her grin begins to fade slightly as she realizes she will never get to visit that lake again. Still, when the girl turns her head back to face her, the woman’s expression snaps back. The child doesn’t need this burden. The older girl walks back down the hallway, holding the glass of water. She is ever-vigilant, knowing the exact spots in the floor that don’t creak, planting her feet gingerly, staring down at them as she takes each step. But something is wrong. Her father is not snoring anymore. The bedroom door flies open, and she drops the glass, shattering it against the floor. The woman’s coughing fit returns, and though she tries to suppress it, she cannot. Her body begins to shake. The frightened little girl gets up and runs to the door, throwing it open, searching for a nurse. The photograph they were looking at falls off the bed, floating down to the tile floor like an autumnal leaf. The bedroom door slams shut, and the Hispanic girl begins her slow, shameful trek back up to her own room. Her pajamas are torn, her face bruised. She turns the corner at the end of the hall and stares up at the staircase, the door to her bedroom at the top. As she makes her tortured ascent, each painful footfall lights a fire on the step. By the time she reaches the top landing, the entire flight of stairs is engulfed in flames. The heat and intensity build, the glow from the fire becoming blinding, fading the image to white. The whiteness stars to shift, move, darken, like a cloud of heavy fog. For the first time, we hear a voice – the tired speech of the sickly woman. “In my restless dreams, I see that town...” Spoiler Edited September 28, 2018 by Xillix 1 1 4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
YM! Posted September 28, 2018 Share Posted September 28, 2018 1 minute ago, Xillix said: FLIGHTS OF FIRE Official Teaser Trailer Hide contents A hospital. Small, understaffed. It’s the middle of the night. She is supposed to be sleeping, but a little blonde girl, seven years old, is sneaking down the hallway. She passes by the door to room after room, reading the numbers, counting her way up to the correct one. But she needn’t bother. The person she wants to visit is still awake. A woman’s raw, ragged cough cuts through the quiet. The little girl recognizes it immediately, and it leads her to her destination. Then the hallway of a cramped, dirty house. A Hispanic girl in her preteens walks slowly, each step careful and soft on the hardwood floor. She passes by her parents’ bedroom, where she can hear her father snoring. After each step she takes, she pauses, wrought with anxiety, listening until the next unsteady wheeze reassures her, for a few seconds more, that his is still asleep. The blonde girl opens the door to the patient’s room. Inside, sitting up on the bed, is a woman in a yellowed hospital gown (Margot Robbie). She is in her twenties, but disease has ravaged her appearance, leaving her looking gaunt and frail. Still, she is happy to see the girl. The child looks at her with concern as she tries to suppress another cough, beckoning the girl toward her. The older, dark-haired girl has made it into the kitchen. A cold, half-eaten dinner sits on the table, a can of beer overturned next to it, its contents staining the tablecloth. It hasn’t been white for a good long while anyway. With the utmost of care, she wraps her small fingers around the handle of the refrigerator door, pulling gently. The light inside flickers off and on. There’s hardly anything inside for it to illuminate anyway. The woman and her young friend sit together on the hospital bed. From the small table next to it, the woman retrieves an old shoebox full of photographs. The little girl removes the lid excitedly, and the woman laughs, searching through the prints to find some she hasn’t shown her yet. The other girl gets herself a glass for a drink of water. She doesn’t want to risk opening and closing a cabinet, so she just uses an unwashed one from the sink. She nervously turns on the tap, turning the knob as little as she can to avoid a noisy gush of water. She stands and stares at the clear, narrow stream of water as it gradually fills the cup. The woman and blonde girl smile, looking over vacation photos from the shoebox. They show the woman in happier times, wearing a modest pink blouse and long white skirt, leaning against the railing of a dock alongside a picturesque lake. Her grin begins to fade slightly as she realizes she will never get to visit that lake again. Still, when the girl turns her head back to face her, the woman’s expression snaps back. The child doesn’t need this burden. The older girl walks back down the hallway, holding the glass of water. She is ever-vigilant, knowing the exact spots in the floor that don’t creak, planting her feet gingerly, staring down at them as she takes each step. But something is wrong. Her father is not snoring anymore. The bedroom door flies open, and she drops the glass, shattering it against the floor. The woman’s coughing fit returns, and though she tries to suppress it, she cannot. Her body begins to shake. The frightened little girl gets up and runs to the door, throwing it open, searching for a nurse. The photograph they were looking at falls off the bed, floating down to the tile floor like an autumnal leaf. The bedroom door slams shut, and the Hispanic girl begins her slow, shameful trek back up to her own room. Her pajamas are torn, her face bruised. She turns the corner at the end of the hall and stares up at the staircase, the door to her bedroom at the top. As she makes her tortured ascent, each painful footfall lights a fire on the step. By the time she reaches the top landing, the entire flight of stairs is engulfed in flames. The heat and intensity build, the glow from the fire becoming blinding, fading the image to white. The whiteness stars to shift, move, darken, like a cloud of heavy fog. For the first time, we hear a voice – the tired speech of the sickly woman. “In my restless dreams, I see that town...” Hide contents 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Reddroast Posted September 28, 2018 Share Posted September 28, 2018 16 minutes ago, Xillix said: FLIGHTS OF FIRE Official Teaser Trailer Reveal hidden contents A hospital. Small, understaffed. It’s the middle of the night. She is supposed to be sleeping, but a little blonde girl, seven years old, is sneaking down the hallway. She passes by the door to room after room, reading the numbers, counting her way up to the correct one. But she needn’t bother. The person she wants to visit is still awake. A woman’s raw, ragged cough cuts through the quiet. The little girl recognizes it immediately, and it leads her to her destination. Then the hallway of a cramped, dirty house. A Hispanic girl in her preteens walks slowly, each step careful and soft on the hardwood floor. She passes by her parents’ bedroom, where she can hear her father snoring. After each step she takes, she pauses, wrought with anxiety, listening until the next unsteady wheeze reassures her, for a few seconds more, that he is still asleep. The blonde girl opens the door to the patient’s room. Inside, sitting up on the bed, is a woman in a yellowed hospital gown (Margot Robbie). She is in her twenties, but disease has ravaged her appearance, leaving her looking gaunt and frail. Still, she is happy to see the girl. The child looks at her with concern as she tries to suppress another cough, beckoning the girl toward her. The older, dark-haired girl has made it into the kitchen. A cold, half-eaten dinner sits on the table, a can of beer overturned next to it, its contents staining the tablecloth. It hasn’t been white for a good long while anyway. With the utmost of care, she wraps her small fingers around the handle of the refrigerator door, pulling gently. The light inside flickers off and on. There’s hardly anything inside for it to illuminate anyway. The woman and her young friend sit together on the hospital bed. From the small table next to it, the woman retrieves an old shoebox full of photographs. The little girl removes the lid excitedly, and the woman laughs, searching through the prints to find some she hasn’t shown her yet. The other girl gets herself a glass for a drink of water. She doesn’t want to risk opening and closing a cabinet, so she just uses an unwashed one from the sink. She nervously turns on the tap, turning the knob as little as she can to avoid a noisy gush of water. She stands and stares at the clear, narrow stream of water as it gradually fills the cup. The woman and blonde girl smile, looking over vacation photos from the shoebox. They show the woman in happier times, wearing a modest pink blouse and long white skirt, leaning against the railing of a dock alongside a picturesque lake. Her grin begins to fade slightly as she realizes she will never get to visit that lake again. Still, when the girl turns her head back to face her, the woman’s expression snaps back. The child doesn’t need this burden. The older girl walks back down the hallway, holding the glass of water. She is ever-vigilant, knowing the exact spots in the floor that don’t creak, planting her feet gingerly, staring down at them as she takes each step. But something is wrong. Her father is not snoring anymore. The bedroom door flies open, and she drops the glass, shattering it against the floor. The woman’s coughing fit returns, and though she tries to suppress it, she cannot. Her body begins to shake. The frightened little girl gets up and runs to the door, throwing it open, searching for a nurse. The photograph they were looking at falls off the bed, floating down to the tile floor like an autumnal leaf. The bedroom door slams shut, and the Hispanic girl begins her slow, shameful trek back up to her own room. Her pajamas are torn, her face bruised. She turns the corner at the end of the hall and stares up at the staircase, the door to her bedroom at the top. As she makes her tortured ascent, each painful footfall lights a fire on the step. By the time she reaches the top landing, the entire flight of stairs is engulfed in flames. The heat and intensity build, the glow from the fire becoming blinding, fading the image to white. The whiteness stars to shift, move, darken, like a cloud of heavy fog. For the first time, we hear a voice – the tired speech of the sickly woman. “In my restless dreams, I see that town...” Reveal hidden contents Mr Del Toro I don't feel so good Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Xillix Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 Now let's hope that @cookie doesn't kill me Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Blankments Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 19 minutes ago, Xillix said: Now let's hope that @cookie doesn't kill me Him? You trying to steal my adult audience for Roger Rabbit smh 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cookie Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 (edited) 4 hours ago, Xillix said: Now let's hope that @cookie doesn't kill me I’m... mostly just confused. Edited September 29, 2018 by cookie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Xillix Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 10 minutes ago, cookie said: I’m... mostly just confused. How so? XD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cookie Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 2 minutes ago, Xillix said: How so? XD Well if you expect it to open as well as the first one that’s probably not going to happen with that date. And what was wrong with November 20th? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Xillix Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 1 minute ago, cookie said: Well if you expect it to open as well as the first one that’s probably not going to happen with that date. And what was wrong with November 20th? Too close to Amityville Part II. At first I didn't much care because I wasn't expecting to like A2 as much as I did. TBH I wanted to put it out on Christmas but there's a ton of movies all coming out that day. I figure there's not a huge ton of crossover between a dark, depressing, scary psychosexual thriller and a PG-13 space opera based on a kid's cartoon. If anything it might be the busiest weekend of the year. Early Christmas gift to exhibitors. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Xillix Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 @cookie I mean if you're upset about it I can change it. It's not like I was attacking you. I just thought Fortnight was more of a direct competitor, despite Voltron's obvious size. Er, no pun intended. And if @Blankments doesn't finish Roger Rabbit I'll definitely move it to the 11th. I didn't want to open BEFORE Voltron because honestly the legs are more important to me on this flick than the opening and I don't wanna risk the second weekend cliff, but we'll need something for that date anyway. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cookie Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 (edited) 1 hour ago, Xillix said: @cookie I mean if you're upset about it I can change it. It's not like I was attacking you. I just thought Fortnight was more of a direct competitor, despite Voltron's obvious size. Er, no pun intended. And if @Blankments doesn't finish Roger Rabbit I'll definitely move it to the 11th. I didn't want to open BEFORE Voltron because honestly the legs are more important to me on this flick than the opening and I don't wanna risk the second weekend cliff, but we'll need something for that date anyway. I don't actually have a problem with it in of itself, I just thought it was a weird decision. I think we can co-exist fine. Just expect OW to be muted because something as massive and four-quadrant as Voltron is going to steal some audience no matter what. Also, is Beat Takeshi still doing it? Edited September 29, 2018 by cookie 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Xillix Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 5 hours ago, cookie said: I don't actually have a problem with it in of itself, I just thought it was a weird decision. I think we can co-exist fine. Just expect OW to be muted because something as massive and four-quadrant as Voltron is going to steal some audience no matter what. Also, is Beat Takeshi still doing it? Takashi Miike? Yeah. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
YM! Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 (edited) @cayommagazine Jake Gyllenhall to voice the main antagonist of Spyro: Nightfall; Gaul, the Ape King. Spyro: Nightfall comes out Y6. Edited September 29, 2018 by YourMother the Edgelord 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
4815162342 Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 I make one decision to redeem @Spagheditary's big betrayal and now everyone gets on the bandwagon 4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cookie Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 21 minutes ago, 4815162342 said: I make one decision to redeem @Spagheditary's big betrayal and now everyone gets on the bandwagon I just couldn't stay mad at those eyes. Venchell 1.0 still sucks tho 2 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cookie Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 (edited) 1 hour ago, Xillix said: Takashi Miike? Yeah. Oops, got him and Takeshi Kitano confused. My bad. Edited September 29, 2018 by cookie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Xillix Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 1 hour ago, cookie said: Oops, got him and Takeshi Kitano confused. My bad. Isn't Beat Takeshi a comedian? XD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...