Archive for September, 2009

Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones

Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones

Dust off the fedora and clear out the snakes — Indiana Jones is ready to ride again.

Harrison Ford, 67, says he’s already ready for the globe-trotting archaeologist’s next adventure, only a year after one of history’s most successful film franchises was revived — and that the next chapter is already well on its way.

“The story for the new ‘Indiana Jones’ is in the process of taking form,” Ford told France’s Le Figaro. “Steven Spielberg, George Lucas and myself are agreed on what the fifth adventure will concern, and George is actively at work. If the script is good, I’ll be very happy to put the costume on again.”

The screen legend was on hand to accept a career honor at the Deauville Film Festival, with partner Calista Flockhart on his arm.

In June, while promoting “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen,” Shia LaBouef — who plays Indiana Jones’ son, Mutt — told the BBC, “Steven’s just said that he’s cracked the story.”
But until it’s again time to fight Nazis and Stalinists and overcome the supernatural, Ford says he’s happy to be a simple househusband.

“I do the dishes. And I make dinner,” he said. “In the mornings, I get my 8-year-old son Liam ready for school, and then I pass my time flying around in my planes. You see, I’m just like anybody else. My children are between 8 and 42, and I’m also a grandfather.”

Though he’s got “Indy” in the works and two films (“Morning Glory” and “The Crowley Project”) set for release next year, Ford says there’s one stereotypical actor’s ambition he’s happy to leave alone.

“[Directing]‘s too hard, too long, and it doesn’t pay enough!” he joked. “To be a good filmmaker is the hardest job in the world. I’m not patient enough. And I don’t want to be the boss.”

Source(s) MSNBC, People

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McAvoy Will Defend 'Conspirator'

James McAvoy and Robin Wright Penn

James McAvoy and Robin Wright Penn

By Phil Guie – CinemaSpy.com

Robert Redford’s period drama The Conspirator, based on events following the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln, has found its leading man and lady.
Wanted star James McAvoy will play Frederick Aiken, the attorney for Mary Surratt, the only woman among a group charged with conspiring to kill the president, Variety reports. Aiken is an idealistic young war hero who reluctantly defends Surratt, and in the process comes to believe her innocence.

 

Robin Wright Penn has been cast as Surratt, who was also the mother of one of the alleged conspirators. Production on the film, based on a script by James Solomon, is scheduled to begin in October.

The Conspirator will mark the film picture financed by the American Film Co., which has engaged Pulitzer Prize winner James McPherson and several Lincoln assassination experts for help with accuracy.

“Stories from our history are often more compelling than fiction,” said Joe Ricketts, an online brokerage entrepreneur and head of American Film Co. “Mary Surratt’s trial is a powerful, relevant story.”

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Christoph Waltz

Christoph Waltz

by Matt Raub – TheFlickCast.com

With the publicity for Seth Rogen and Michel Gondry’s Green Hornet picking up steam in the past monh or so, more news has come out on the casting of the main villain in he film, Mr. X. The role was originally set to go to Nicolas Cage, but for whatever reason (possibly the fact that he’s got another superhero film in the works with Kick-Ass), Cage has stepped down from his role.

We now recieve word that the role will instead be taken on by Christoph Waltz, fresh from playing the Nazi baddie in Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds.

“I’m told that ICM’s actor Christoph Waltz who won Best Actor at the Cannes Film Festival for playing a Nazi in Inglourious Basterds (and is a shoo-in for an Oscar nomination) has now been cast as villain Chudnofsky in Sony’s The Green Hornet opposite Seth Rogen and Cameron Diaz.

Since Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds came out — and crossed the $100M mark this weekend – Waltz has been offered a lot of big movies by a lot of big directors. And he’s getting big bucks now. How great he’s found success at age 52.”

This is the second news of an actor getting replaced from the film after Stephen Chow stepped down from both directing and the role of Kato. See Waltz, Rogen, and Cameron Diaz in theaters for Green Hornet on December 17, 2010

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Adrianne Palicki

Adrianne Palicki

By Peter Dimako
Amanda Crew and Adrianne Palicki are set to star in “Breaking the Girl,” a thriller which starts production in Canada next spring.

Amanda Crew

Amanda Crew

Jamie Babbit (“The Quiet,” “But I’m a Cheerleader” and TV’s “The Gilmore Girls”) is helming from the screenplay by Mark Distefano and Guinevere Turner.

Story tells of a naive college student who loses her scholarship at the hands of a classmate. She makes a deal with a mysterious friend which involves offing each other’s enemies.

Crew was last seen in “A Haunting in Connecticut” and the roadtrip Summit Entertainment comedy “Sex Drive” alongside Josh Zuckerman and Clark Duke.

“Friday Night Lights” star Adrianne Palicki can be next seen with Paul Bettany, Dennis Quaid and Tyrese Gibson in Screen Gems’ “Legion” fantasy actioner.

Source(s): MovieJungle.com, Variety

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Sexy Neetu Chandra loves action scenes

Neetu Chandra

Neetu Chandra

By Jenni Marsh – DigitalSpy.com

Neetu Chandra has revealed that she enjoys performing her owns stunts in action films.

The actress said that she found dressing up as a “sexy thing” while shooting Anees Basmee’s new film in South Africa.

Chandra explained: “To add to my character, I have a lot of action to do. From taking on goons and kicking real butt, I also have a small hand gun, which I have had to use.

“And to make it really natural, Anees gave me a real gun. I actually fired five shots with it.”

The star can next be seen in romantic comedy Theeratha Vilayatu Pillai, alongside two former Miss Indias – Tanushree Dutta and Sarah-Jane Dias.

Sarah-Jane Dias

Sarah-Jane Dias

Tanushree Dutta

Tanushree Dutta

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Zoe Saldana

Zoe Saldana

by Elisabeth Rappe – Cinematical.com

The lovely Zoe Saldana is quickly becoming a name to contend with after managing to land plum parts in not one, but two of the biggest sci-fi films of the decade: Star Trek and Avatar. One is a bonafide hit, the other remains shrouded in a lot of mystery, but it’s a mark of Saldana’s star power that she’s making a name outside of their huge hype. Plus, she’s becoming an action heroine in her own right, and just might be our generation’s Sigourney Weaver or Linda Hamilton.

We had the chance to catch up with Saldana this week, and she was game to talk about both projects. Of course with the Star Trek sequel still in a misty writing stage, she didn’t have any big secrets to spill, but she shared the opinion of a lot of female Trek fans in hoping Uhura gets to do a little butt-kicking later on. “In Star Trek, I had so much fun, but the boys got all the action! J.J. [Abrams] promised me that I’m going to — [that] in the sequel, she will have at least one little fight. I mean, just [let me] kick a guy in the groin or something!” Laughing, she revealed that there was an enormous ongoing e-mail list among the cast, Abrams, and the Trek producers where they regularly chat and joke back and forth. From the sound of it, that’s also where the groin-kicking requests are made.

 Saldana was full of enthusiasm and emotion for her Avatar experience and was as full of praise for James Cameron as her costar Sam Worthington. “Avatar definitely had a purpose and will always have a very special place in my heart because it was the one film that I got to shoot for two years. Usually, we only shoot for three months and you have this amazing time with the cast, and the director, and the crew. And then the film lives forever for you guys, but our experiences of shooting that will only live for three months, and sometimes we feel cheated. Working with an amazing director like James Cameron, and working with Sam Worthington who I just — he’s one of the most selfless actors I’ve ever met. We’re literally like brother and sister now. But not incestual! [laughs] Don’t [confuse] that with Avatar, because they are in love! Sh*t! But it was amazing.”

Buy the NEW Star Trek 3 Disc DVD!

Buy the NEW Star Trek 3 Disc DVD!

Saldana didn’t comment on the Internet hype or criticism of the Avatar trailer, or say anything about the finished product, but she makes sure Cameron hears the good stuff fans are throwing his way. “I’ve only seen the first one, I’ve seen the first 16 or 25 minutes that we also showed in Amsterdam over the summer. But I’ve seen the movie! And I always e-mail Jim, like everytime I hear someone say ‘Oh, I can’t wait for Mr. Cameron’s movie!’ I go “Oh, People love ya!’”

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Where the Wild Things Are

By Chris Lee – LATimes.com

When Spike Jonze set out to create live-action versions of the classic creatures from “Where the Wild Things Are” for his movie adaptation of the beloved children’s book, the writer-director had a very clear image in mind — of what he didn’t want.

In 2004, around the time he also started co-writing its script with novelist Dave Eggers, Jonze rejected a number of submissions from a Hollywood special-effects company for being, well, “too creature-y.” Jonze thought they simply failed to capture a bestial je ne sais quoi found in Maurice Sendak’s 1963 picture book about Max, a little boy in a wolf costume who misbehaves and imagines himself transported to a faraway land where he becomes the king of all Wild Things.

“I wanted the monsters to retain the strange design that Maurice had created,” he said. “Weird, cuddly, charming. Looking at each other out of the corner of their eye. They’d be almost, like, conspiring. You don’t know if Max has total control over them.”

To ensure his monsters would have the proper “soul,” though, Jonze decided he needed an illustrator from outside the movie biz to draw mock-ups first. Over dinner, Jonze’s friend Karen O, lead singer of the alt-rock trio the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, and Julian Gross of the noise rock band Liars steered the director toward their pal Sonny Gerasimowicz.

He wasn’t a professional creature creator or artist. A former graffiti writer turned ad agency creative, Gerasimowicz was a kind of closet artiste with only one illustration for a magazine article to suggest his skill. Offered the chance to work with the zeitgeist-riding auteur, Gerasimowicz didn’t present him a polished portfolio. He showed Jonze rough pencil drawings of the Wild Things. And the lo-fi renderings struck just the right nerve. “I sent him sketches that were, like, things I drew while I was on the telephone. Like on scraps of paper,” Gerasimowicz recalled.

“When it comes down to something as delicate as tone, it became clear we had to find someone who had the right aesthetic,” Jonze said. “It’s finding people that have the right judgment, even if they’ve never done the specifics.”

Gerasimowicz landed the job in early 2005, the mandate being not to slavishly imitate Sendak’s singular style, more to articulate the creatures’ distinct personalities as per the script (it helped that Jonze physically acted out each character for him). In turn, Gerasimowicz drafted scores of monster drawings: previsualizations for Photoshop-version Wild Things, the stage during which such crucial details as their fur, feathers, musculature and eyes would be decided.

Then the two traveled to Connecticut to show Sendak the renderings and get his blessing. The then-76-year-old writer-illustrator made some tweaks — suggestions about the muzzle on a bull-like Wild Thing and the feathers on the rooster Thing not being “flamboyant” enough — but remained markedly nonproprietary. “His attitude is so contrary to protecting anything,” Jonze said. “His assignment to us was, ‘Take this, make it your own. Make it something personal.’ ”

In 2006, the project landed at Warner Bros. and monster production began at Jim Henson Co.’s Creature Shop. Gerasimowicz was kept on as head creature designer, overseeing work by some of the foremost practitioners in the business. Nevermind that he had absolutely no experience. Or that the expense of making the monsters accounted for the largest part of the movie’s production costs. Or that his staff wasn’t exactly certain where he fit in.

“I would give them aesthetic direction, ‘What if we kind of did this a little bit?’ And they’d be, like, ‘That’s a cool thought.’ But they would keep moving with what they were doing,” Gerasimowicz said.

With principle photography in Australia approaching in the spring of 2006, anxiety set in. Jonze had precise ideas about the way the Wild Things should look, i.e., “not like they were guys in suits.” But Jonze and Gerasimowicz’s lack of familiarity with how special effects are created resulted in sleepless nights during the characters’ fabrication.

“It was so hard!” Gerasimowicz exclaimed. “They show us a bare-bones suit and it would be the scariest thing in the world because it’s just a big foam thing. Not doing this ever before, it was hard to visualize.”

“We freaked out every step of the way,” Jonze added. “By the time we got to Australia, we were nervous wrecks.”

Compounding matters, the actors who were to perform in the Wild Thing suits had to be in costume up to 12 hours a day. Suits weighed up to 150 pounds and temperatures reached triple digits. When one of the actors dropped out at the last minute, Gerasimowicz’s job description changed again: He stepped into the role of Alexander, a small, snarky goat in the film. “Sonny has a demeanor similar to that character,” Jonze said. “I always describe him as a disgruntled Muppet.”

For anyone familiar with Sendak’s book, Jonze’s “Wild Things,” which opens Oct. 16, will be a marvel. The characters — voiced by such actors as James Gandolfini, Forest Whitaker and Lauren Ambrose — seem comfortingly familiar and yet occupy a totally unique movie universe, a vivid live-action extrapolation of Sendak’s classic work. Especially the creatures’ emotive faces. Asked if CGI was responsible for their expressiveness, however, Jonze grew cagey.

“The faces were static when we shot them and we put the faces on in post-production,” he said. “I didn’t want to have CGI faces where it’s synthetic fur. So it’s more manipulating what we’d shot in-camera.

“It’s not like it’s a big secret. But I want to let that come out later. I don’t want the attention to focus on that.”

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Original Cast Back For "Jeepers Creepers 3"

Jeepers Creepers The Creeper

by Chad Langen – ReelEmpire.com

Victor Salva recently stated that the third installment in the popular horror film series has nearly got its coin.  “The financing is just coming together, so perhaps we will be in preproduction shortly,” Salva says. “We have been saying this for a year now, but that’s really about all I can with any certainty.”  He’s also certain of another thing and that’s who will be starring in the film, at the moment, titled “Jeepers Creepers 3″.  The casting includes some familiar faces including Jonathan Breck who played the ‘Creeper’ both in the original flick and its sequel.  Gina Phillips, the heroine of the original flick, is also confirmed by the director to be returning.  Read on for the rest of the story!

“Breck will of course don his wings once again as our favorite flying man-eater, though we have decided, after much fan feedback, to give him his truck back for the new film”.

And Gina Phillips, the heroine of the original film, will also be back.

It’ll be “ 23 years later” says the filmmaker, and she’s now “ a successful business woman who has her own teenage son, Darry, named after her long lost brother.”

The new film will be set in new terrain, says Salva.

“We have decided that the third film should, like one and two, be different from each other in look and locale – after all, the highway in question “runs the length of the state. So you may be missing your Spanish moss again and much of the story takes place in the desert part of our fictitious Jeepers state that includes Poho, Pertwilla, and Kissell County.”

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Rainn Wilson gets superheroic in ‘Super’

Rainn Wilson

Rainn Wilson

by Patrick Sauriol

After providing the voice of an extraterrestrial supervillain in Monsters vs. Aliens this past spring, The Office’s Rainn Wilson will get his chance to play a costumed good guy in Super. That’s the new film coming from Scooby-Doo/Dawn of the Dead remake writer James Gunn who made his directing debut with the horror gross-out Slither.

In Super Wilson will play a married man (his wife will be played by Liv Tyler, a nice catch.) After seeing his better half fall under the charms of a charismatic drug dealer the hubby decides to clean up his neighborhood by creating a superhero persona called Crimson Bolt. What’s the superhero’s favorite weapon of choice? A wrench. Not every superhero gets the luxury of a billionaire’s trust fund for weapons R&D.

Also starring in the film will be Ellen Page (Juno, the upcoming Drew Barrymore comedy Whip It.)

Source(s) Variety, CoronaComingAttractions

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Iron Man Screenwriters Working on Akira

Akira

Published by Jeff Leins – NewsinFilm.com

Mark Fergus and Hawk Ostby, two of the screenwriters on Iron Man, are working on a live-action adaptation of Japenese anime Akira.  Leonardo DiCaprio’s Appian Way is still producing for Warner Bros, though no word on whether they’re considering the double feature announced in February 2008.

Since the press release, there has been very little news of the continued project after a seven figure deal with Katsuhiro Otomo, the manga series author, original anime director, and now executive producer.  One report a few months ago even declared it “dead as a doornail,” at least in its previous form.

The update comes from Collider, who confirmed the setting is still post-apocalyptic Manhattan in “the near future” (the previous film was in 2019).  It will definitely include the famous motorcycle and a teen biker gang member subjected to government experimentation.

The article says WB is planning an “event movie” and will make this a priority financially and logistically sometime in 2010 for a possible 2011 release.  Ruirai Robinson was originally set to make his directorial debut, but I don’t know if that’s still the case.  No casting has been decided either, so rumors of DiCaprio or Joseph Gordon-Levitt co-starring in anything but Inception are false.

Fergus and Ostby have also been tapped to write Cowboys and Aliens for Robert Downey Jr. and possibly director Jon Favreau.  The team also contributed to Children of Men

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