eEvery now and then, the movie project discussed looks so true that you can almost touch it, even if it has a chance of actually being shown in multiplexes as Vladimir Putin to win the Nobel Peace Prize. This week’s reports It points out that Cate Blanchett, the dean of serious, brooding cinema, was lining up not too long ago to star in Star Trek for Noah Hawley, director of Fargo (TV version) and Legion.
Regular readers of this blog will know this Paramount decided to go a different route with the next release In the ongoing adventures of the Starship Enterprise. They’re bringing back Captain Kirk for Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto Spock, along with their buddies rebooted from a trilogy led by J.J. Abrams, but Wandavision director Matt Shukman will be the man in the driving seat instead.
That means we’ll start hearing things leak about how Hawley’s version fell, and one of those coins is Blanchett’s involvement. Exactly what role she would have played is not public knowledge, but the idea of the Australian actress as captain of her own Star Fleet ship, battling strange-looking creatures and discovering anomalies in the deepest space is so irresistible that it may actually be happening right now in a much cooler alternate reality It is the unfortunate reality in which we live.
Why Blanchett has only appeared in a few major genre projects in her career – Galadriel in The Lord of the Rings trilogy, Irina Spalco in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull And Odin’s infamous nephew Hela V Motorcycle rental Spring to mind – it is a mystery. Few other actors can chew up a scene with such lustful ferocity and mischievous glee as awards season favourite. However, oftentimes it seems restricted to the kind of films that only critics see.
Blanchett’s infuriating absence from genre fare is probably due to the fact that, at times, she has clearly chosen the wrong projects. Spalco might be Steven Spielberg’s favorite villain, but the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull itself was a pretty clumsy attempt to jump on a shark from headstrong antique fantasy to sci-fi. Which brings us to Blanchett’s latest foray into mainstream cinema, the upcoming modified video game Borderlands.
What? I hear you ask. Yes Blanchett He took the lead in the big screen shot In 2009’s first-person perspective of a “robber shooter,” Lilith is also described as a notorious outlaw with a mysterious past who reluctantly returns to her home planet Pandora (no, not that one) to find the missing daughter of a powerful tyrant. The movie is directed by Eli Rothwho is he download Movies This awesome edition of death wish. It all sounds as confusing as a file A delicious bowl of Klingon gagh.
Can’t we bring Hela back to Marvel? The Asgardian god may have died at the end of Ragnarok at the hands of the fire demon Surtor, but how exactly does she kill the goddess of death? I mean, there must be alternative ways of scripting here to help get it back in action. After all, DC Superman brought back a box of bullshit And some plastic sticky back!
If not, maybe Paramount will find some way to make Blanchett stand out in Star Trek 4 after all. It doesn’t have to be a huge role: she can be revealed as Scottie’s sleeker, more elegant sister, or as the leader of a race of completely extraterrestrial women on the verge of achieving the civilized knife when Kirk accidentally drops a 1,000-ton tribesman into their capital. We’ll take anything at this point. Just please don’t waste a double Oscar winner in a bad Eli Roth video game.
But hey, this is the Star Trek we’re talking about. Maybe we can just pull out the old “red stuff” and create an “alternative timeline” where this article was never written because Hollywood studios make better creative decisions. And if not, maybe it’s time for Ragnarok the whole darn place to fiery oblivion.
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