
Aside from this amazingly gorgeous new poster of Sucker Punch with all 5 girls, Apple is releasing a new trailer of Sucker Punch at 5pm PST. Yes! Watch out for the brand new trailer! On a different side, a lot of articles have been released today regarding On Set previews of Sucker Punch where more ideas of what’s going on with the story and the movie have been revealed.
Check out this article from Hollywood.Com:
All the Way Crazy: On the Set of Zack Snyder’s ‘Sucker Punch’
On a characteristically frigid day in British Columbia last November, I received a guided tour of Zack Snyder’s brain. Its contents were spread out among the many soundstages and production offices at Vancouver Film Studios, where the director of 300 and Watchmen was nearing the end of principal photography on his latest epic, Sucker Punch. The film, a sprawling action/fantasy musical(!) about a girl who retreats into an alternate reality while waiting to be lobotomized, is the first of Snyder’s live-action works based not on a popular comic book or a previously released film. Rather, it’s an extravagant paean to everything that has ever influenced, inspired, or interested him as an artist since, well, ever.
“40 years of stuff that you like, all smushed together and turned into a single thing” is how Snyder described Sucker Punch, chatting between takes of a scene in which Babydoll (Emily Browning), clad in a skimpy schoolgirl outfit, tussles with a pair of undead German World War I soldiers. It might be called Snyder’s first “original work,” but it faithfully adheres to his established (and enormously successful) formula of taking something familiar — in this case, bits and pieces of tropes and tableaus from assorted comic books, anime, and films… Continue on reading here
from Coming Soon.Net:
As hard as it is to believe, it’s been roughly 11 months since ComingSoon.net was invited to the Vancouver set of Zack Snyder’s upcoming movie Sucker Punch, his first movie based on one of his own original concepts. It could very well be seen as the counterpoint to his earlier hit 300, a way of changing gears after making so many manly-men movies to do one that’s primarily focused on female characters. From our time spent on set, it clearly was a chance for Snyder to wear his influences on his sleeve without having to feel cornered by “original source material” as has been the case with his previous four films. Continue on reading here