Robert Knepper joins "Transporter 3"

Variety has confirmed that Jason Statham will reprise his role as Frank in Transporter 3, the next installment in EuropaCorp’s franchise.

He will reteam with co-star Francois Berleand, while Robert Knepper has joined the cast.

The film, which will be produced by EuropaCorp principal Luc Besson and Steve Chasman, will shoot for 16 weeks in Russia and France.

Source: Variety

Happy Birthday Dominic!



Dominic Purcell aka Lincoln Burrows turned 38 years old today! Happy Birthday Dominic from PBREAK.org!

It turns out February 17th is a popular day for birthdays. Michael Bay, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Paris Hilton, Denise Richards and Jerry O'Connell all turn another year older today.

In other news, Dominic is rumoured to be starring alongside Al Pacino, Piper Perabo and John Cena in a new action movie entitled "12 Rounds". The story follows detective Danny Baxter who is about to have the worst day of his life when an evil crime lord kidnaps his girlfriend and forces him to go "12 Rounds" around the streets of New Orleans.

Greetings From Wentworth





This arrived in the mail today from Wentworth Miller aka Michael Scofield! Unfortunately due to time constraints, Went was unable to answer my questionnaire for the blog, but signed these 2 awesome photographs instead (click them to enlarge). Cheers Wentworth!

"Whisper" - January 26th 2008



Awhile ago I posted that Sarah Wayne Callies' straight to DVD movie "Whisper" was going to be out in stores shortly. Well now "Whisper" will be airing on TNT on Saturday January 26th at 9:00 pm in the US. Below is the synopsis of the movie:

When the ten-year-old son, David, (Blake Woodruff) of a wealthy New England socialite is abducted, his kidnapper Max Harper (Josh Holloway) and his seedy associates assume it will be a routine kidnapping in exchange for a large ransom. Unknown to the kidnappers, the shy and reserved David actually has a hidden agenda of his own, and a mysterious way of tapping into the minds of others. Soon, Max will wish that he had never kidnapped David, much less even heard of him.

The film also stars Lost's Josh Holloway.

Source: Prison Break Buff

Dominic Purcell in "Town Creek"



Here is the first still from Dominic Purcell's upcoming horror/thriller movie "Town Creek" which is set to open in 2008. The movie is about a man and his brother on a mission of revenge who become trapped in a harrowing occult experiment dating back to the Third Reich.

"Town Creek" had it's first screening in Chatsworth, CA last month and a moviegoer in attendence gave his short review on IMDB.com. Here is what he had to say on the bloody action horror:

I thought it was GREAT. A very good film. Aside from the camp fun teens vs. vamps classic the Lost Boys, I am NOT a big fan of the work of Schumacher. Nothing he has done prepared me for this. This is more like Near Dark. This is an intense, bloody, very fast paced and violent occult/vampire/action film set in the US rural midwest. The word vampire is never uttered in this film. The lead baddie is more of a monsterous ghoul. Not a sexy vampire/human, he is more like the ugly Nosferatu, but more deformed. And throw out everything you know about vampire lore - no garlic, no turning into a bat, no Christian cross. The plot concerns a Nazi effort to use the occult to gain eternal life. This movie is very fast paced. The first 9 minutes are in an enhanced black and white, set in 1936 as a Nazi historian visits a German-American family in rural America. This scene is great. When the movie jumps into modern day, it goes right into the revenge story and the action. I will leave out story and spoilers. The funny thing is, as i said, most of the 17-25 crowd did not seem to like this movie. I fear they way cut out some of the violence and gore to make it more apppealing to all the little Britney wannabes shopping at the mall. they need to realize that this movie will play to the 25-45 crowd who like serious horror films and intense action films. Acting was very good in the two lead roles, and the supports. There is a terrible part at the end that sets up a sequel, which should be cut. And the title Town Creek is utterly stupid - nothing to do with the film and sounds like a rural farm family drama. I suggest for a title "THE RUINS" or "THE BLOOD STONE" or "DARK RIVER" or "BLACK RIVER" Anything but Town Creek! Bottom line, great horror film. A horror/action film with balls and brains.

- akwilks2002, IMDB.com

Fichtner calls 'The Amateurs' his best work

As one Web site puts it, character actors are often known simply as "that guy," because their faces are more familiar than their names. Despite having appeared in more than three dozen projects, including his second season on the Fox drama Prison Break, William Fichtner still believes he's at "that guy" level.

And he's OK with that.

"That's a good place to be," Fichtner says. "Somebody asked me [this morning], 'When was your big break?' I don't think I ever had a big break. I don't think that's ever been my journey. I didn't do my first film till I was 36 years old -- not that I didn't want to; nobody would hire me."

Once he started getting small roles in movies such as 1994's Quiz Show, however, Fichtner began earning the right to be more choosy, and now he says he only pursues projects he's passionate about. He's passionate enough about his latest movie, The Amateurs, to spend his 51st birthday doing interviews promoting the film.

The Amateurs is the kind of movie that needs a boost -- a small indie comedy about a bunch of friends who band together to make a porn film as part of a get-rich-quick scheme. It says more about friendship than it does about sex, although there's plenty of sex talk in the film. The buddies are led by Andy Sargentee, a lovable loser played by Jeff Bridges. Fichtner plays Otis, a blue-collar Lothario who turns out to be more talk than action.

Fichtner says that Otis is his favorite role, and that The Amateurs is his favorite project ever. That's saying something, considering that he has appeared in such respected movies as Heat and Black Hawk Down, and that he had a juicy role as a sheriff with a dark side in the short-lived, cult-fave ABC series Invasion. Usually, when actors say stuff like this while they're promoting the movie in question, it sounds like PR-fed bull. But Fichtner comes off as sincere.

He says a lot of it has to do with how much the actors enjoyed working with one another -- the cast also includes such familiar faces as Joe Pantoliano and Ted Danson. The camaraderie began even before shooting started when Bridges invited cast and crew to spend time at the family beach house the weekend before production started.

"A lot of times when you start shooting a film, you have limited rehearsal and you show up for work, and you're [playing people] who are supposed to have been friends forever," Fichtner says. "[At the beach house], the guitars came out, and it was Kumbaya at 3 o'clock in the morning, and an awful lot of red wine. It was just great. And we rehearsed -- out in front of the beach house, somebody took a sneaker and kind of drew the lines in for the set. ... It was invaluable to spend that sort of time together."

Although the Internet Movie Database lists The Amateurs with a 2005 copyright date, Fichtner says it's been knocking around for about 3 1/2 years. The original distributor, he says, wanted to release it directly to DVD, but everyone who had bonded so well on the film fought for a theatrical release. The movie stayed locked up till First Look Pictures bought it and gave it a limited big-screen showing, which could expand if the movie does well in the few cities where it's playing.

It predates Fichtner's stint on Prison Break, the far-fetched but entertaining Dallas-filmed drama that's due to return to the Fox schedule in early 2008. On Prison Break, Fichtner plays Alexander Mahone, an obsessed, drug-addicted and at times murderous FBI agent. Mahone's pursuit of escaped-convict brothers Michael Scofield and Lincoln Burrows lands him in a Panamanian prison with Scofield (that the brothers have different last names is only the start of the show's bizarre convolutions). Fichtner signed on at the beginning of the 2006 season and stuck around, making it the longest he has ever stayed with a TV project.

"I said to my wife the other day that doing a series is a close to having a regular job [that I'll ever get]," says Fichtner, who spends weekdays in Dallas and weekends home in L.A. when the series is in production. "I like changing gears and doing different things, and that's always been the most fun to me. It's very different when you do a series. It's a character that goes on and on."

Fichtner originally pressed for one season, but the writers gave Mahone enough layers to keep him interested enough to stick around for another year.

And even though that Panamanian prison is a set near downtown Dallas and the actors go home at the end of the day, working on Prison Break can have grueling challenges, especially in the North Texas summers.

"We got spared a lot of heat this year," Fichtner says. "Last summer, I think there were 60 days in a row of 100-degree heat. That was stunning. I would walk from my apartment to the downtown Y, and it was like a blow-dryer."

The Amateurs is playing at the Angelika Film Centers in Dallas and Plano.

Source: Star-Telegram

Hollywood comes calling for Knepper

According to The Denver Post, Prison Break favourite T-Bag aka Robert Knepper is rumored to be playing the next Bond villain, co-starring with Hugh Jackman in the "X-Men" spinoff "Wolverine" and starring in a remake of Alfred Hitchcock's "The Birds". Awesome, huh?

In a 20-year career, actor Robert Knepper has played everything from Julia Roberts' husband in Woody Allen's "Everyone Says I Love You" (1996) to Robert F. Kennedy in "Jackie, Ethel, Joan: The Women of Camelot" (2001). But he didn't become famous until he created a murderous, racist pedophile named Theodore "T-Bag" Bagwell on the television series "Prison Break."

Since then, oozing charm and menace in equal amounts, Knepper has captured audiences worldwide. Not only is he starring in a big Hollywood film, "Hitman," set to open on Wednesday, but also he is rumored to be playing the next Bond villain, co-starring with Hugh Jackman in the "X-Men" spinoff "Wolverine" and starring in a remake of Alfred Hitchcock's "The Birds" (1963).

What a difference a sneer makes.

Four months before becoming television's baddest dude, the 48-year-old Knepper feared that he would have to give up acting to support his wife and 5-year-old son.

"I tried to get a job teaching theater at UCLA, but I didn't have the right credentials," he says by telephone from his Dallas home. "I did get an offer from UCLA Extension, but it only paid $50 a week."

Meanwhile the producers of "Prison Break" were looking for, as Knepper puts it, "a 240-pound, stupid Southern hick with a gold tooth and tattoos" to play a convict named T-Bag. Didn't sound promising for Knepper, who is a slim 5-foot-9 and sounds like George Clooney when he isn't putting on a Southern drawl, but he saw possibilities. When he went in to audition, he threw them a curve ball.

"I wanted to charm the pants off them," Knepper says. "It's like, when you go out on a date, you don't say over the first drink, 'Wanna go home and ...?' How far would you get that way? Or 'Here's what's wrong with me.' You don't talk about negative stuff - if you want to get beyond first base, you've got to charm. For me it comes naturally, because I am more interested in other people."

He got the part, and then had to convince himself that he could do it.

"The first season I took a pen and put 'xoxoxo' around the middle finger of my left hand," he says. "(I thought) 'If I can just feel tough, I'll be OK."'

It worked. Knepper's portrayal of T-Bag was one of the most talked-about performances of 2005, and two years later audiences still seem to love the character, even though he's the kind of psycho who will kidnap the woman he loves and slaughter the veterinarian who reattached his severed hand.

"When I get my Oscar someday, I'll thank 'Prison Break,"' Knepper says. "It's what started this whole new chapter for me."

Don't forget guys, Robert has a role in the new movie "Hitman" which opens in US theaters on Wednesday!

Robert Knepper in "Hitman"

Yeah yeah I know, off-topic, but to hell with that- this is Robert Knepper we're talking about!

Here is the official brand new international poster for 20th Century Fox's Hitman, coming to North American theaters on November 21 and to the UK on November 30. The action-thriller stars Timonthy Olyphant and Prison Break's Robert Knepper and is based on the video game. Co-stars include Dougray Scott, Olga Kurylenko, Ulrich Thomsen, Michael Offei and Lost's Henry Ian Cusick.

Click here to enter the official website and to watch the trailer for the new movie. Enjoy! Make sure you check the movie out when it hits theaters to support Robert if nothing else!