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20th Century Fox to tell the story of Moses, 300 style

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on October 12, 2009

The Ten Commandments

By Mike Fleming – Variety.com

For his first significant film project acquisition, Peter Chernin is taking on a project of Biblical proportions.

20th Century Fox has made a preemptive acquisition of a pitch to tell the story of Moses in “300″ style. The tale will start with his near death as an infant to his adoption into the Egyptian royal family, his defiance of the Pharoah and deliverance of the Hebrews from enslavement.

Chernin will produce with Dylan Clark, who recently moved over from Universal to become president of Chernin’s Fox-based film company.

The script will be written by Adam Cooper and Bill Collage, who make this their followup to a high-level deal they made to reinvent Herman Melville”s “Moby Dick,” with a graphic novel feel, for director Timur Bekmambetov and producer Scott Stuber at Universal. That script is in, the extensive pre-visualization work is done. It could be Bekmambetov’s next film, if “Wanted 2″ doesn’t come together first.

The Moses story will be told using the same green screen strategy as “300,” so it will feel more like that pic or “Braveheart” than “The Ten Commandments,” the 1956 Cecil B. DeMille film.

The popular mythical and magical elements inherent in the Book of Exodus will be there–including the plagues visited upon Egypt and the parting of the Red Sea–but the Cooper & Collage version will also include new elements of Moses’ life that the writers culled from Rabbinical Midrash and other historical sources.

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Brad Anderson to Adapt Graphic Novel ‘The Living and the Dead’

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on October 8, 2009

The Living and the Dead

by Ramses Flores – Collider.com

Brad Anderson (”Session 9″, “The Machinist”) has now signed on to direct the filmed adaptation of the graphic novel “The Living and the Dead”.  The graphic novel by Robert Tinnell and Todd Livingston started off as a screenplay before turning into a comic and has now been revisited by the two creators with the news of Anderson coming on board.  You can get all of the details when you click on the jump.

In their exclusive report, Comics2film at Mania.com reports that the 2005 graphic novel focuses on a monstrous character who “engages in the nineteenth-century version of snuff theater, luring innocent people in a Grand Guignol of flesh and blood.”  In all fairness, they didn’t have reality TV in the 19th century. The story sounds pretty pulpy, Gothic, and Hammeresque to me and knowing that Anderson is going to be behind the camera makes me think that this could be pretty great.

I really like Anderson’s films mainly because of his direction.  I think that he’s outstanding at creating a certain mood or atmosphere and it seems like I’m not the only one who thinks so because Tinnell is quoted as saying: “Obviously he’s a storyteller, and obviously he knows how to build tension, but what I also like is that when you watch his movies you really feel like you’re inhabiting the space.”

It’s still unclear when Anderson will start production on “The Living and the Dead” since he is currently attached to direct “Vanishing on 7th Street” which starts production this month.

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A zombie that never sleeps: Rob Zombie has ‘sickness’ that keeps him in motion

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on August 27, 2009

Rob Zombie

Rob Zombie

Nicholas White – LATimes.com

Nicholas White , a freelance journalist here in Los Angeles, is back with another Hero Complex contribution, this time a conversation with Rob Zombie, the rocking Renaissance man of horror, whose new film “Halloween II” lands in theaters with a splatter this Friday. 

What horror lurks in the mind of a pop nightmare maker?

“I think it’s kind of a sickness I suffer from,” Rob Zombie, director of “Halloween II,” said on the eve of his new movie’s release. “I cannot relax and settle down. My brain is always racing with ideas. I can’t calm down. I’m like that all that time. My wife [actress Sheri Moon Zombie] knows how to relax. I don’t so much sometimes. So, I drive her insane with it.”

On closer look, Zombie’s practiced professional insanity — whether through bloody bodies onscreen or macabre imagery in his music — appears more of a character than the real guy.

Strip away the stringy, cobwebby hair and caked-on white makeup, and Zombie (whose given name is Robert Bartleh Cummings, born in 1965 in progressive working-class Massachusetts) is just another very hard-working performer in the Hollywood industry.

In addition to directing movies, creating comic books (his 2007 “The Haunted World of El Superbeasto” was made into a still-unreleased movie voiced by Paul Giamatti), and a platinum-selling recording career, Zombie is, simply, a painter.

“Drawing and painting are always one of my first loves — that’s what I have always done,” Zombie, a onetime painting student at New York’s prestigious Parsons School of Design, says. “That’s always been the thing that’s fallen away. Now it’s something I’ve gotten back into. And I love it.

Halloween II H2“Movies, music — I love all that, but it plays on a different scale,” he says. “It’s millions of dollars, you’re expected to make back millions of dollars. You have millions of people come see it. Painting
is much purer. I’m not doing it to set up a show and sell things. I just do it to do it.”

While he has no plans for another comic book or graphic novel, Zombie is painting “gigantic figure-study” paintings of people at his house, he says. “Kind of classic stuff.”

“The reality of the business now is that if you have an idea for a movie and if you have done it first as a graphic novel, it really makes trying to sell that idea to somebody much easier,” Zombie says.
“That was the hope with ‘The Haunted World of El Superbeasto.’”

Zombie’s fourth film in seven years, “Halloween II,” bearing the name but not the plot of the 1981 original movie, hits theaters Friday. Opening against the similarly themed “Final Destination 3-D,”
“Halloween II” has big expectations.

Its distributor, the Weinstein Co., is said to be in financial straits after a string of unprofitable movies. While Zombie’s 2007 “Halloween” grossed more than $80 million worldwide for the Weinsteins, the production company could use a hit.

The Weinsteins’ other big late-summer horse, “Inglourious Basterds,” had a surprising $38-million opening weekend, buoyed by Brad Pitt’s star power and a kamikaze marketing campaign. Quentin Tarantino’s last collaboration with the Weinsteins, “Grindhouse,” a double-feature ode to raw B-movies of the 1970s, grossed less than half its nearly $70-million production budget.

Does Zombie feel pressure to keep the Weinsteins on life support?

“I have never heard that from them, they have never said that to me,” Zombie says. “I have only read that on a couple of Hollywood websites. But, no one has ever said it to me personally, like, ‘Oh, this film
has to do this for us.’ The only pressure I feel is to make the movie great.” As for working with the Weinsteins, which he has now twice after “Halloween”?

“I don’t know,” Zombie says, succinctly. “It is what it is. Everything is a difficult process, and this Halloweencan be a very difficult process at times.”

Zombie, by most accounts, has shown a progression in ease with the camera since his rocky, cultish 2003 debut, “House of 1000 Corpses.”

The narrative-lite “Corpses” (which dragged in mostly subpar reviews) had a distinctive brutality reminiscent of early 1970s Wes Craven, even if Zombie’s aesthetic wasn’t completely developed. His next film,
2005′s “The Devil’s Rejects,” was a more polished effort.

“It doesn’t really get easier, but you get more confident in what you can accomplish,” he says. “There is a moment in every movie where the whole thing can come crashing down. Movies are funny because you need a thousand things to go right everyday, and you only need one thing wrong to derail the whole thing.”

How many filmmakers have howled at the moon in front of sold-out arenas and huge festival crowds? Zombie proved himself both as a solo artist and as front man for the 1990s rock band White Zombie. His new album is finished and hits stores Nov. 10, he says, and he returns to touring in Japan on Oct. 1 and circles back to the U.S.stage on Oct. 15.

“I love music and I love movies, but they’re so opposite, the process, that it’s such a great release,” Zombie says. “I can tour the whole world and meet thousands of fans on a daily basis, and get the vibe of what’s going on. That’s a great luxury.”

LATimes.com– Nicholas White

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Cowboys and Aliens script is done

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on August 12, 2009

Cowboys & Aliens

By Fred Topel – SciFiWire.com

Screenwriting duo Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman (Star Trek) said they turned in their draft of Cowboys & Aliens on Aug. 5 and are now awaiting feedback on their screenplay adaptation of Fred Van Lente’s graphic novel.

“We literally handed it in yesterday,” Kurtzman said in a group interview on Aug. 6 in Pasadena, Calif., where the duo were promoting their Fox TV show Fringe. “So ask us Monday.”

Watchmen (Director's Cut)

Watchmen (Director's Cut)

Damon Lindelof co-wrote the script with Orci and Kurtzman. Orci added that they’ve done the best they could, and now it is in producers’ and actors’ hands.

“We’ll find out, literally,” Orci said during the interview. “We’re waiting to hear from the principals. We try not to turn it in until we think it’s ready. Obviously, there are always things you can improve.”

The graphic novel deals with feuding frontier settlers and Native Americans in the Old West who team up to fight extraterrestrials. Orci and Kurtzman previously told SCI FI Wire that they put their own spin on the story. Now producers Brian Grazer, Ron Howard and Steven Spielberg, as well as potential star Robert Downey Jr., will get their say.

“We’re just literally waiting to hear if they hate it or what,” Orci said.

Cowboys & Aliens is tentatively slated for a 2011 release, with some sites reporting June 24 as the specific date.

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Disney Buys Domain Names For Monsters Inc 2, The Tiger King and World War Robot

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 31, 2009

ashely_wood_world_war_robot_poster

Peter Sciretta – SlashFilm.com

   If you read the Friday morning edition of the Hollywood trade newspaper Variety, you will notice a story about Jerry Bruckheimer acquiring the big screen rights to IDW Publishing’s graphic novel World War Robot. But if you had looked at the recent domain records that Disney had purchased: WORLDWARROBOT-MOVIE.COM, WORLDWARROBOTMOVIE.COM, or WORLDWARROBOTTHEMOVIE.COM, you would have known about this announcement before it happened.

   Jim Hill noticed that the mouse house went on a domain buying spree yesterday (July 29th), snapping up a bunch of Internet addresses for possible upcoming projects. So which projects were on the purchase list? Details after the jump.

Among the new domains purchased was MONSTERS2.com, the possible future location for the highly rumored sequel to Pixar’s Monsters Inc. At a recent licensing fair, Disney officials supposedly told attendees behind closed doors that Pete Doctor would be following Up with Monsters, Inc 2. We asked Disney head John Lasseter about the rumors last weekend at Comic-Con, but as expected, he wouldn’t comment. The domain purchase seems to be an admission by Disney that they are developing a sequel, or at very least — thinking about it.

   Another interesting purchase was the domain TheTigerKingMovie.com, which we can only assume is a spin-off based on The Lion King. With the word “Movie” in the domain name, we know it is a feature film — but we don’t know if it is a new animated feature film or a direct-to-dvd production. Some of you might remember that when John Lasseter became Chief Creative Officer of Walt Disney Animation Studios when the Mouse purchased Pixar in January of 2006, he was quick to kill many of the company’s direct-to-dvd sequels and spin-offs, because he believed the productions hurt the studio’s brand. The Aristocats 2, Chicken Little 2 : The Ugly Duckling Story, Meet the Robinsons 2: First Date, and Disney’s Dwarfs were among the productions which were trashed. I find it hard to believe that Lasseter would approve of a Lions King spin-off titled The Tiger King, unless it was for theatrical release. But you never know?

   As for World War Robots, which was mentioned above, the 48-page book World War Robotwas published in August 2008, and is out of print. Here is the official plot synopsis from the book:

Award-winning designer/artist Ashley Wood (Popbot, Zombies Vs. Robots) has handled his share of robots over the years. And now, he presents total robot war! In World War Robot, a dwindling band of humans and robots face off in a battle that will likely end humanity as we know it – on Earth, on the Moon, and on Mars, too! Badass battles, really intense human/robot drama, and even a little black humor and political intrigue are the order of the day in this oversize, standalone epic courtesy of Wood.

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‘Spider-Man’ Director Agrees to Take on Warcraft Project

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 22, 2009

World of Warcraft

MICHAEL CIEPLY – NYTimes

Legendary Pictures, which joined Warner Brothers in backing “The Dark Knight” and “300,” took a big step toward assembling what may be its next blockbuster franchise: the company said on Tuesday that Sam Raimi had agreed to direct a movie based on the World of Warcraft online game and fantasy universe.

Mr. Raimi directed three films in Sony’s “Spider-Man” series and is expected to start shooting a fourth this fall, set for release in 2011. His signing with “World of Warcraft” makes that film one of the strongest bets on the Warner schedule as early as 2012.

Blizzard Entertainment, which introduced its first Warcraft game in 1994, began developing the current film version with Legendary three years ago. With more than 11 million monthly subscribers, the Warcraft series has been widely described as the most heavily played of the multiplayer online games, which pit players against one another via the Internet.

GoreMaster Makeup Effects ManualWarner, which is expected to be a co-financer of the “Warcraft” movie and to distribute it, has been hungry for new film series to augment a roster of high-budget fantasy and action franchises that include the Batman, Superman and Harry Potter films. The studio flirted with, then pulled back from, a “Justice League of America” project that would have put some of its DC Comics-based heroes, including Batman and Superman, in a single film.

And it had a misfire this year with “Watchmen,” an expensive picture based on a graphic novel, of which Legendary was co-financer. That film underperformed at the box office and was not seen as a good candidate for sequels because ardent fans were so insistent on fidelity to the complex, underlying story, about the decline of masked crime fighters.

It was not immediately clear when production might start on the “Warcraft” film, which would be delayed until Mr. Raimi finishes with “Spider-Man 4.” He last directed “Drag Me to Hell,” a supernatural horror picture that was not intended as a broad crowd pleaser and took in only about $42 million at the domestic box office when it was released by Universal Pictures in May.

Charles Roven, a producer of “The Dark Knight,” is among the producers of the “Warcraft” film, Legendary said.

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