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24 director heads behind the wheel of DreamWorks’ Motorcade

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on October 7, 2009

Jon Cassar

Jon Cassar

by Patrick Sauriol – CoronaComingAttractions.com

Jon Cassar, the co-executive producer and frequent director of Fox’s 24, is sliding into the director’s chair for Motorcade, the long gestating action-thriller that’s been in development at DreamWorks. Ryan Reynolds is now attached to play the lead role, a disgraced Secret Service agent that gets embroiled in a kidnapping attempt of the President of the United States.

DreamWorks is hoping to have Motorcade shooting by this time or earlier next year. The script is by Hans Bauer and Craig Mitchell, with Billy Ray (State of Play) performing rewrites at the present time.

Cassar’s directed 59 episodes of 24 so he’s got plenty of experience ordering around a jiggling camera. This would be his first feature film.

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Amazon Specials!

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Writer McQuarrie tapped for “Wolverine” sequel

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on August 15, 2009

hugh-jackman-wolverine-promo-pics

By Borys Kit – Hollywood Reporter

Christopher McQuarrie has signed on to write the script for the “Wolverine” sequel, in which Hugh Jackman will return as the Marvel Comics character, a mutant with healing powers and a skeleton laced with the indestructible metal known as adamantium.

The 20th Century Fox movie’s story line will take its cue from the early 1980s Chris Claremont/Frank Miller miniseries, which is set in Japan and features Wolverine dealing with ninjas as he struggles to decide whether to follow his animal killer instincts or live under a samurai’s code of honor and respect.

The studio put a sequel in development after “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” carved up almost $180 million at the domestic box office and $363 million worldwide.

The sequel’s story line was hinted at in one of the movie’s codas after the credits. (The other teased a spin-off based on Deadpool, the character played by Ryan Reynolds.)

McQuarrie is not unfamiliar with the character. The screenwriter, who won an Oscar for “The Usual Suspects,” reteamed with that film’s director, Bryan Singer, to write “X-Men.” McQuarrie could have received a credit, but he voluntarily took his name off the movie when the final version was more in line with David Hayter’s script than his.

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How Scarlett Johansson Shaped Up for Iron Man 2

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 27, 2009

Scarlett Johansson

Scott Huver – People.com

   Even enviable-looking Scarlett Johansson couldn’t disguise her fear at having to don a skintight catsuit for her Iron Man 2 role as the Russian spy Black Widow.
  “I kicked some major butt,” the actress, 24, told PEOPLE at Comic-Con of her training regimen to make her a shapely superhero ready for acrobatic battle scenes. “It was many, many, hours, days, and months of stunt training and strength training, but it’s fun because I had a goal. The goal was the Lycra catsuit.”
   Was she happy with the results? “Finally I was, yes,” she said with a laugh. “You put that much work into something and you put it on and you better be happy with it.”
   When it came to putting on the catsuit, “It was crazy to see it for the first time – everything all zipped up and all the weapons in there, bracelets on, the whole look. It was pretty sweet, I have to say,” she says.
   As for the impression it made, “Certainly walking on set, because a lot of the people that worked on the film were fans of the comic and of course they knew the Black Widow – they were all super excited to see the Black Widow,” she says. “When everybody in the crew were like, ‘That looks awesome!’ I GoreMaster Makeup Effects Manualknew. Like, ‘Okay.’ ”

   “She was wearing an unforgiving costume,” concurred Johansson’s Iron Man 2 director Jon Favreau, who was impressed by his star’s physical commitment to the role. “She didn’t eat much, that’s for sure. She likes food, as do I, and she was definitely on a low-carb diet and training very hard. It was amazing.”
   After viewing Johansson’s stunt work, Favreau says, “I think people are going to be very impressed when they see her. It’s totally different than anything you’ve seen her do before.”
   And while Johansson’s husband, Ryan Reynolds, has already showed off his beautiful bod in The Proposal, the couple also share something else in common: their reading material.
   With Iron Man 2, which opens May 7, 2010, making her a Marvel Comics superheroine, Reynolds has just landed the role of DC Comics’ Green Lantern. As a result, says Johansson, “I have quite a few stacks of comic books,” she says. “We’re in completely different [comic-book] universes over there, but it’s something that I’m certainly delving into for the first time. There is quite a stack!”

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Christian perspective and talent help ACU grad excel in Hollywood

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 24, 2009

the proposal

By Sara Morris – public relations coordinator  Abilene Christian University

Abilene Christian University alumnus Nelson Coates (’84), credits his attitude for landing him the job as production designer for this summer’s blockbuster comedy, “The Proposal.” Coates and his crew planned, researched and produced the entire visual content of the film, which was No. 1 at the box office nationally during its opening weekend.

Don't Say a Word“It’s all about the can-do attitude. Attitude can really affect a production. If you watch a film and think, ‘It looks like they had fun making this,’ we probably did,” said Coates. “The nurturing environment of the ACU community was a wonderful grounding experience that I carry through when I work with my crew. I feel responsible for creating that same feeling, changing daily the mental attitude of those who work with me.”

In Coates’ 20-year career designing motion pictures and television, he has created the concept and coordinated the execution of sets, props, costumes, hair, make-up, visual effects, creature effects, color palette, symbolism, locations and vehicles for more than 30 productions. Coates is the first ACU graduate to become a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. He is also a long-time member of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

“Dr. Charles Marler, who taught my Communication Law class at ACU, gave me skills and information that I use on a daily basis. When I deal with copyright laws and ownership rights, as well as just that attention to detail that the ACU journalism department instilled in me, I think of Dr. Marler,” said Coates. “There were several people at ACU who had a profound influence on my career, but I use everything I learned there. Nothing was wasted.”universal soldier

For “The Proposal,” which is set in New York City and Sitka, Alaska, Coates chose to film in and around Boston. He simulated a New York publishing house in a vacant office tower in downtown Boston, changing out signage and bringing in New York City taxis and buses to shoot street scenes, and he created the feeling of southeastern Alaska by constructing a house for the main characters and modifying surrounding buildings.

“I describe my work as narrative design for the moving image,” said Coates. “In many ways I am a cultural anthropologist, creating and infusing a movie with visual clues to back history of the characters, as well as their current life status. Whether creating fake history, recreating exact events or forecasting GoreMaster Makeup Effects Manuala future yet to come, my job is to infuse the film with every visual detail to make the environments seem believable and plausible.”

Coates makes it a point to give others an opportunity to excel in the film business that they could not have gotten by themselves, he said.

“There were very few breaks given to me in this business, just because ACU didn’t really have any grads in the business, so I feel it’s incumbent upon me to give people a break. Every show I try to get people in and give them a leg up,” said Coates. “God has been taking care of me throughout my career, and I see an opportunity for good. We need more Christians in the entertainment industry.”

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Megan Fox and Ryan Reynolds help DC Comics storm the film world

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 20, 2009

Megan Fox

By Borys Kit – Hollywood Reporter

In the comics universe, where characters are endlessly reborn and reoutfitted, a motto from the 1980s — “DC Comics is on the move” — could just as well apply to the current, hyperactive state of the publisher as it relates to Hollywood.A year after “The Dark Knight” became a worldwide phenomenon, there are more DC Comics adaptations in the works than at any other point since the company was acquired by Warner Bros. in 1969.

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Among the projects on front burners:

— “The Losers,” an action-adventure drama starring Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Zoe Saldana and Chris Evans, begins principal photography this week in Puerto Rico.

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Buy this poster here!

— “Jonah Hex,” a supernatural Western starring Josh Brolin, Megan Fox and John Malkovich, recently wrapped production in Louisiana.megan fox in vancouver

— “The Green Lantern,” Warners’ next big superhero tentpole, is set to star Ryan Reynolds after a long search.

— Fox has picked up the TV series “Human Target,” starring Mark Valley, for the fall.

— And, in a rare example of a film project that has ventured off the Warners reservation, DC has set up “Red,” a spy thriller to star Bruce Willis, at indie producer Summit.

“One of the things that has differentiated us for most of the last 20 years is the depth of our library and the depth of the creative material that we’ve put out and the opportunities that creates for other media,” DC Comics president Paul Levitz said.

Still, when “Dark Knight” invaded theaters last summer, critics of DC and Warners complained there didn’t appear to be a grand strategy in place to exploit DC properties.

In contrast, DC arch-rival Marvel moved quickly in the wake of its successful “Iron Man” to stake out a series of release dates for a slew of movies, branding them as part of one big Marvel universe leading to “The Avengers,” which arrives in 2012.

But DC and Warners have taken a different approach, arguing that DC has a wider breadth of books than other comics companies. They insist their situation isn’t comparable to Marvel, which already has licensed out to other studios a number of its biggest titles: Spider-Man is housed at Sony, while X-Men and Fantastic Four are at Fox.

With fewer marquee superheroes, Marvel works like an animation studio: It only develops select projects and makes most of what it develops, while DC is managing a much larger portfolio.

Still, in the wake of “Dark Knight,” DC and Warners have made strategic moves in the superhero realm, including centralizing the way DC’s titles and characters are developed. In the past, Warners optioned a property, paying DC a fee comparable to what a property could command on the open market. But while the projects ostensibly were being developed under one roof, many were spread out over a host of producers, each with different visions for how to approach each adaptation.

Watchmen (Director's Cut)

Watchmen (Director's Cut)

To bring competing approaches into sync, Levitz and DC’s Los Angeles-based film exec Gregory Noveck have overseen a reorganization of the development slate. While Warners execs still drive the creative side, DC now has more input, making it an actual participant in the shaping of material.

“The creative process is by and large a true partnership,” Noveck said. “They’ll ask us a ton of questions, and we’ll give a ton of answers. We will talk back and forth. We’ll discuss writers and talent, but ultimately it’s their decision.”

Ryan Reynolds in X-Men Origins Wolverine

Ryan Reynolds in X-Men Origins Wolverine

This past fall, Warners quietly hired three of DC’s biggest writers — Geoff Johns, Grant Morrison and Marv Wolfman — to act as consultants and writers for its superhero line of movies. The move involved taking back the reins on projects being handled by such producers as Charles Roven (“The Flash”) and Akiva Goldsman (“Teen Titans”).

Some agents and scribes grumbled about being forced to work with the consultants, never mind that Johns started his career as an assistant to “Superman” director Richard Donner or that Wolfman has worked in animation since the 1980s.

The moves have begun to pay off. Johns worked up a new treatment for a “Flash” script, being written by Dan Mazeau; Johns will act in a producer capacity on the project, which has not attached a director.

The projects Morrison and Wolfman are working on are in the early stages at Warners, whose execs declined to comment.

The process involves one writer taking point, though the trio do collaborate on projects, reading one another’s materials while hashing out a story that will be at once accessible to nonfans yet still adhere to each character’s long history. The writers also work in tandem with producers, writers and the Warners execs overseeing the projects, showing them treatments and providing notes on scripts.

Meanwhile, other superhero projects are moving forward at Warners.

The studio is taking pitches on sci-fi hero Adam Strange and the underwater-breathing hero “Aquaman,” to be produced by Leonardo DiCaprio and his Appian Way shingle.

Also in the pipeline: “Bizarro Superman” being written by “Galaxy Quest” Ryan Reynoldsscribes David Howard and Robert Gordon; a sequel to “Constantine,” with Goldsman and Erwin Stoff producing; two concurrent Green Arrow projects, an origin story and a prison-set one titled “Super Max”; and “Shazam,” which was set up at New Line but has moved to Warners, with Pete Segal attached to direct.

Unsung in the lineup is Warners’ line of straight-to-DVD animated movies released via Warner Premiere. “Green Lantern: First Flight,” the latest entry, will premiere at this week’s Comic-Con gathering in San Diego and has a July 28 street date.

These movies, produced on budgets in the $3.5 million range, apparently overperformed their targets. “First Flight” is the fifth straight-to-DVD title, with “Superman/Batman: Public Enemies” in production for a September 29 release.

In the home entertainment arena, DC has overshadowed Marvel, with 2007’s “Superman-Doomsday” generating $9.4 million in revenue and last year’s “Batman: Gotham Knight,” taking advantage of the tidal wave of support for the Christopher Nolan movie, generating $8 million, according to tracking site The-Numbers.com. “Wonder Woman,” released in March, already has chalked up $4.4 million. Marvel’s top seller, “Ultimate Avengers 2,” has pulled in $7.7 million.

Not that all the stars in the DC firmament are aligned yet.

Warners and DC still haven’t figured out how to translate “Wonder Woman” to the big screen. In part, that failure reflects the difficulties DC has had turning out a popular Wonder Women comic. Morrison, during a recent Q&A with Clive Barker at Los Angeles’ Meltdown Comics, admitted he didn’t have a complete handle on the character when he was writing the comic “Final Crisis.”

Also, ever since Bryan Singer’s 2006’s “Superman Returns,” a new Superman has been in limbo.

“Our hope is to develop a Superman property and to try again,” Warner Bros. Entertainment president Alan Horn said in April. “What hurt us is that the reviews and so on for the Superman movie did not get the kind of critical acclaim that Batman got, and we have other issues with Superman that concern us.”

 On the Batman front, a sequel to “Dark Knight” also is quite a way off. Nolan is open to doing a third installment, but his next movie is “Inception,” an original script he penned and is shooting for Warners.

All that has put a damper on any movie about the Justice League, whose roster includes the above-mentioned heroes as well as myriad others including Aquaman and the Martian Manhunter. DC would like to present some of the main heroes in their own movies before they are brought together for one big outing, so “League” currently is inactive.

On top of that, there could be another change in how Warners approaches the DC characters, with studio chiefs debating whether to put the operation under one super-exec.

To bring the next generation of superheroes to the screen, DC and Warners might yet have to unleash their own super powers.

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Ryan Reynolds cast as ‘Green Lantern’

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 11, 2009

Ryan Reynolds

Ryan Reynolds

Borys Kit  – Hollywood Reporter

And then there was one.
   After an intense months-long search, Warner Bros. has settled on Ryan Reynolds as its choice to play “Green Lantern,” the studio’s live-action tentpole based on the DC Comics hero. The film is being directed by Martin Campbell and produced by Donald De Line and Greg Berlanti.
   Reynolds and his camp entered negotiations for the part Friday, after the studio held two rounds of screen tests, along with actors Bradley Cooper and Jared Leto. Justin Timberlake also did a screen test.
   The studio had holding options on the actors, but, except for Reynolds, those expired Monday. Reynolds’ option would have expired end of day Friday.
   One reason for the long search was De Line, Campbell and the studio each had a different favorite among the finalists, making it difficult to come to a consensus.
   If the deal is completed, it would make Reynolds the only actor to have played heroes for both Marvel and DC. He recently starred in a comic book movie, Fox’s “X-Men Origins: Wolverine,” where he played “the merc with a mouth” Deadpool. The character is now being developed for a spin-off to which Reynolds is attached. He also played Marvel’s vampire hunter Hannibal King in “Blade: Trinity.”
   “Lantern” is actually Reynold’s second stab at a DC Comics hero. A few years ago, he was attached to play the comic company’s speedster “The Flash.”

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Bradley Cooper, Ryan Reynolds and Justin Timberlake: Who will be the Green Lantern?

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 10, 2009

Bradley Cooper (left), Ryan Reynolds (c) Justin Timberlake (right) (Getty)

Bradley Cooper (left), Ryan Reynolds (c) Justin Timberlake (right) (Getty)

Borys Kit – The Hollywood Reporter

   Warner Bros. is about to decide who will wear the super-powered ring in “Green Lantern,” the studio’s latest DC Comics tentpole movie.
   Along with director Martin Campbell and producers Donald De Line and Greg Berlanti, Warners has spent the past five months searching for the actor to play Hal Jordan, the hot-shot Air Force pilot who is chosen by a dying alien to be his successor in an intergalactic police force known as the Green Lanterns.
   This week, the race narrowed to Bradley Cooper, Ryan Reynolds and Justin Timberlake. The clock is ticking on the decision as the holding deal the studio had on the actors expired Monday, meaning the three are now free to accept other offers.GoreMaster Makeup Effects Manual

The studio ordered up two rounds of screen tests with Cooper, Reynolds and Timberlake. Other actors in the early mix included Michael Fassbender, Henry Cavill and Jared Leto.
   Apparently, De Line, Campbell and the studio each had a different favorite among the three finalists, making it difficult to come to a consensus.
   Another issue impacting the casting process is the rising budget. “Lantern” is a full-blown space epic that is expected to cost between $150 million and $200 million, if not more. Warners would like to have the production costs at a reasonable level before proceeding. Green Lantern
   The studio has scheduled the movie for a December 2010 opening.
   Cooper, repped by CAA and Thruline, is feeling a lot of love from Warners as he stars in the studio’s surprise comedy hit, “The Hangover,” which has grossed $210 million domestically.
   UTA-repped Reynolds recently starred in a comic book movie, Fox’s “X-Men Origins: Wolverine,” where he played “the merc with a mouth” Deadpool. The character is now being developed for a spinoff to which Reynolds is attached. The actor is also in theaters with Disney’s romantic comedy “The Proposal.”
   Timberlake, repped by CAA and Rick Yorn, has been steadily building an acting resume, appearing in such dramas as “Alpha Dog” and “Black Snake Moan” while also showcasing his comedy chops with appearances on “Saturday Night Live.”

Clay Pinney (Independence Day, The Matrix Reloaded, Star Trek) has been tabbed as special effects supervisor.

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Ryan Reynolds in a Coffin?

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on June 25, 2009

Ryan Reynolds

Michael Fleming – Variety

After starring with Sandra Bullock in romantic comedy “The Proposal,” Ryan Reynolds has lined up a much grittier proposition for his next film.

Reynolds will star in “Buried,” playing a civilian contractor who’s kidnapped in Iraq and awakens buried in a coffin in the desert, armed only with a cell phone, a candle and a knife.

Rodrigo Cortes will direct a script by Chris Sparling; production will begin this month in Barcelona.

Peter Safran will produce through his Safran Co. banner with Adrian Guerra of Spain-based Versus Entertainment, which is financing the film. The picture will shoot entirely in Spain, which is home to Cortes, best known for directing “The Contestant.”

Reynolds takes the job after the showy role of Deadpool in “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” and “The Proposal.”

He decided to go the indie route as a way to stretch his acting chops in a movie with a claustrophobic premise, and one in which he holds the screen through most of the picture.

Reynolds, the writer and director are repped by UTA.

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Hail the Cinematographer!

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on June 5, 2009

Best Cinematographer winner for 'Slumdog Millionaire' Anthony Dod Mantle

Best Cinematographer winner for 'Slumdog Millionaire' Anthony Dod Mantle

By David Coddon, San Diego Union Tribune

Let’s hear it, belatedly, for Anthony Dod Mantle. Whaddaya mean “who?”

Just a couple of months ago, he won the Oscar for best cinematography for his work on “Slumdog Millionaire.” If you remember the sweeping scope and stirring visuals of that film, you can understand why Anthony Dod Mantle was honored with a gold statuette. It will console him in his anonymity (at least outside the technical arm of the movie industry).

This also may explain why no one around the newsroom ever “picks up and forgets” (i.e., purloins) to return my copy of American Cinematographer. A monthly insider on how films are made, it lacks the glitz of Entertainment Weekly or the gossip of Us Weekly.

The cinematographer’s contribution to film is immeasurable. Yet he – or she, as the case may be – is a name in the credits and nothing more to most moviegoers.

The cinematographer is the movie’s director of photography, working with the director on how the film is shot. We take this for granted as viewers, in a way that we don’t take for granted, by comparison, special effects. We may not know – or care – who’s responsible for a film’s special effects, but we comment or opine, one way or the other, about them.

When was the last time you came out of a theater with anyone but a filmophile and heard the movie’s cinematography praised?

To wit: “Hugh Jackman was awesome as Wolverine, and Ryan Reynolds was cool. But how about that cinematography of Donald McAlpine’s?”

More than special effects – something blowing up or somebody flying – the look of a film, when it engulfs you, draws you in – makes me go “Wow” under my breath.

“Apocalypse Now” made me go “Wow.” So did “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,” and so did “Dances With Wolves,” among many others. A film need not be a spectacle to be a triumph of cinematography, either. “American Beauty,” for example, won the best cinematography Oscar, and it was a character study. But one we remember for its images (remember the paper bag blown by the wind?) as well as for its close-ups and its script.

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Remember when, in that movie, image and script come together? “Sometimes,” Ricky (Wes Bentley) says to Jane (Thora Birch) as they’re watching the bag swept on the breeze, “there’s so much beauty in the world I feel like I can’t take it, like my heart’s going to cave in.”

The director: Sam Mendes. The writer: Alan Ball. The cinematographer: the late Conrad L. Hall. The moment: Perfect.

 

Anthony Dod Mantle other works include 28 Days Later,The Last King of Scotland and Antichrist.

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