Category: Movies

  • POTD: See Seth Rogen as a Version of John Milius in ‘Zeroville’

    POTD: See Seth Rogen as a Version of John Milius in ‘Zeroville’

    Seth Rogen zeroville

    The picture above isn’t a Halloween party shot; it’s a behind the scenes pic from James’ Franco‘s film adaptation of the novel Zeroville. And Seth Rogen isn’t really playing screenwriter and director John Milius. In fact, he’s playing a character called Viking Man… who is a very thinly-disguised representation of Milius. Zeroville features quite a few such figures. Some of the book’s characters are famous (Martin Scorsese is represented, for instance) while others are fairly obscure.

    See the full Zeroville shot, complete with an appearance from Will Ferrell, below.

    Badass Digest pointed out Franco’s Instagram post.

    Seth Rogen zeroville

    zeroville-2

    What role is Ferrell playing here? We don’t know — he could be one of a couple producers that factor into the story as Franco’s character Vikar finds his place in the filmmaking business as an editor.

    The rest of the Zeroville cast, as we’ve previously reported, is similarly full of Franco’s friends: Danny McBrideCraig RobinsonDave FrancoJacki WeaverHoratio SanzJoey King, and Megan Fox all factor into the project. Fox and King play two of the most important characters, a mother and daughter pair who recur throughout the novel. And Jacki Weaver should have some great scenes as a Hollywood veteran who becomes a friend and mentor to Vikar.

    IMDB claims to have info on a couple of the other famous personality appearances, withMia Serafino playing Ali MacGraw and Kevin Makely playing Steven Spielberg.

    The post POTD: See Seth Rogen as a Version of John Milius in ‘Zeroville’ appeared first on /Film.

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  • Clive Barker Offers Some Info on His ‘Hellraiser’ Reboot Script

    Clive Barker Offers Some Info on His ‘Hellraiser’ Reboot Script

    Hellraiser reboot

    Like the torn-apart Frank Cotton in the original film, Hellraiser keeps trying to pull itself back together. Harvey Weinstein has experimented with reboot and sequel ideas for the past few years, attaching a couple different directors at different times for projects that ultimately failed. But a year ago Clive Barker revealed that he had pitched Weinstein on a loose remake idea that the producer liked. Suddenly, Barker was reunited with his directorial debut and working on the newest version of the tale.

    Now Barker has finished the second draft of the film that will reboot and expand upon the story seen in the original Hellraiser. (And which was created in Barker’s novella The Hellhound Heart.) A few details are below, thanks to the author.

    EW spoke to Barker on the occasion of the release of the Nightbreed director’s cut blu-ray, which finally presents Barker’s 1990 film in a cut that resembles his original intentions.

    Talking about that movie is also a good excuse to bring up Hellraiser, the “very loose remake” of which continues to develop:

    I think the phrase is ‘reboot,’ although I’ve never really understood what that meant. I wanted to make sure we sounded some fresh notes. The movie actually begins on Devil’s Island. I wanted to fold into the Hellraiser narrative something about the guy—the Frenchman Lemarchand—who made the mysterious box, which raises Pinhead. I figured, ‘Well, what would have happened to him?’ He might well have been taken to Devil’s Island [a penal colony] and I thought that would be a pretty cool place to start the movie. We’re waiting for Bob to come back to us and see when we’re going to actually make the movie.

    In Barker’s original novella, Lemarchand was one of a few people who had devised a method of communicating with the extra-dimensional Cenobites. (That group includes Pinhead, who became the film series’ poster child.) Lemarchand has been portrayed on film before, in Hellraiser IV: Bloodline, the last film in the series to get a theatrical release. (There are five more direct to video sequels. The last one, Hellraiser: Revelations, was made in a matter of weeks so that the Weinsteins would retain rights to the franchise.)

    The idea of Barker writing the reboot is pretty good, but at the same time I’m a lot less interested in further explorations of the same ideas already seen in the Hellraiser films than I would be in development of other concepts related to what we already know. But I’m not assuming anything just yet; let’s see where Barker’s script goes.

    And while Barker plans only to write this reboot, with directing duties left to someone else, he could get back into the chair eventually:

    We’ve got some really cool things coming down the pike. They’re movies which I’m able to watch over as a producer rather than as a director, [but] each time another thing gets added to the rest of the things that we’re doing, I get more tantalized by the idea of actually doing it as a director myself. So, I don’t think I’ll wait too long until I sign on for something myself.

    The post Clive Barker Offers Some Info on His ‘Hellraiser’ Reboot Script appeared first on /Film.

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  • Page 2: Transformers, Star Wars, Doctor Who, Ghostbusters, HTTYD, Alien, Star Trek

    Page 2: Transformers, Star Wars, Doctor Who, Ghostbusters, HTTYD, Alien, Star Trek

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    Page 2 is a compilation of stories and news tidbits, which for whatever reason, didn’t make the front page of /Film. After the jump we’ve included 36 different items, fun images, videos, casting tidbits, articles of interest and more. It’s like a mystery grab bag of movie web related goodness.

    Header Photo: Election sign

    How Overdue Actors Can Win for the ‘Wrong’ Performance

    The 13 Worst Halloween Movies of All Time

    Luke Skywalker: Red Five X-wing Pilot Sixth Scale Figure

    Luke Skywalker: Red Five X-wing Pilot Sixth Scale Figure Pre-order

    Big Screen to Small Screen: 27 Movies Being Made Into TV Shows

    How do TV writers write? They ‘break’ the story first.

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    A TARDIS Pumpkin Like No Other

    Is Star Wars Rebels Lacking Girl Power?

    Harvey Weinstein: Netflix Is Winning Because It Has Vision

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    Tom Whalen’s metal 1:1 prints are now online

    Pilots ‘Knifeman’ & ‘GalyntineNot Going Forward At AMC

    Watch: Visual Essay ‘Anatomy Of A Gag’ Exploring The Genius Of Jacques Tati

    We TV Cancels Drama ‘The Divide’ After One Season

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    May The Ghosts be With You? t-shirt

    Legendary and Universal’s ‘KrampusAvoids Showdown with Seth Rogen Christmas Movie

    Continue Reading Page 2 >>

    The post Page 2: Transformers, Star Wars, Doctor Who, Ghostbusters, HTTYD, Alien, Star Trek appeared first on /Film.

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  • HBO Will Air a ‘Hello Ladies’ Movie to Conclude the Series

    HBO Will Air a ‘Hello Ladies’ Movie to Conclude the Series

    Hello Ladies movie stephen merchant

    After multiple successful TV shows with partner Ricky Gervais, Stephen Merchant didn’t have the same success with the HBO show Hello Ladies. It had some fans, both critical and general, but never caught hold of pop culture like other HBO shows and was thought to be done after one season. Well, in classic Merchant fashion, the series is getting one more shot to wrap everything up. HBO will air Hello Ladies: The Movie on November 22nd at 10 p.m.

    HBO announced the news via press release, which we saw on Indiewire. A TV movie is a fitting end to the series, simply because that’s how Merchant has closed out his other shows such as The Office and Extras. Those were “Christmas specials” but they were also like 90 minutes episodes of the show. Basically a movie.

    Here’s the full press release. Will you be checking out the Hello Ladies movie?

    HELLO LADIES: THE MOVIE, WRAPPING UP THE COMEDY SERIES FROM STEPHEN MERCHANT, DEBUTS NOV. 22, EXCLUSIVELY ON HBO

    When Stuart learns that his British ex-girlfriend is planning to visit Los Angeles with her husband, he sets out to impress them with his glamorous lifestyle, enlisting a Russian model he’s just met to play the role of his beautiful girlfriend. What could go wrong?

    Starring Stephen Merchant (co-creator of the Golden Globe-winning BBC comedy series “The Office” and HBO’s “Extras”) as Stuart, HELLO LADIES: THE MOVIE wraps up his story when it debuts SATURDAY, NOV. 22 (10:00-11:20 p.m. ET/PT), exclusively on HBO.

    Other HBO playdates: Nov. 24 (5:15 p.m.), 26 (2:30 p.m.) and 30 (4:00 a.m.), and Dec. 3 (12:45 p.m., 12:30 a.m.), 7 (3:00 p.m.), 13 (9:30 a.m.) and 23 (7:00 p.m.)

    HBO2 playdates: Nov. 25 (11:00 p.m.) and 28 (10:00 a.m., 10:00 p.m.), and Dec. 16 (1:45 p.m., 10:35 p.m.), 20 (10:10 a.m., 12:45 a.m.) and 26 (5:00 p.m., 3:05 a.m.)

    The eight-episode season of “Hello Ladies,” which debuted on HBO in Sept. 2013, tells the story of Stuart, a gawky 6’7” English transplant seeking excitement and romance in Los Angeles. Searching for the woman of his dreams amidst the city’s dazzling nightlife, Stuart’s romantic aspirations far outstretch his looks or appeal. Half as charming – and twice as desperate – as he thinks he is, he’s obsessed with infiltrating the glamorous world of beautiful people, who won’t let him in.

    In addition to Stephen Merchant as Stuart Pritchard, HELLO LADIES: THE MOVIE stars Christine Woods (Jessica), Nate Torrence (Wade), Kevin Weisman (Kives) and Kyle Mooney (Rory), with Sean Wing (Glenn) and Crista Flanagan (Marion) in guest roles.

    Stephen Merchant’s other HBO credits include “The Ricky Gervais Show” and “Life’s Too Short.”

    HELLO LADIES: THE MOVIE is produced in association with ABC Studios; directed by Stephen Merchant; written by Stephen Merchant, Gene Stupnitsky and Lee Eisenberg;executive producers, Stephen Merchant, Gene Stupnitsky and Lee Eisenberg; producer, Dan Kaplow.

    The post HBO Will Air a ‘Hello Ladies’ Movie to Conclude the Series appeared first on /Film.

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  • Channing Tatum ‘Gambit’ Film Will Be Based on a Chris Claremont Treatment

    Channing Tatum ‘Gambit’ Film Will Be Based on a Chris Claremont Treatment

    Gambit movie writer

    The Gambit movie just took a big step forward. We know that Channing Tatum is set to play the character in a film from Fox that will likely connect to the existing X-Men franchise. And now the film has a screenwriter: Josh Zetumer (the RoboCop reboot) will script. But the interesting bit for long-time comic book fans is that Zetumer’s script will be based on a treatment from one of the most significant X-Men comic book writers and the character’s co-creator, Chris Claremont.

    Deadline reports that Tatum is now officially set to star, and that he is also producing with Reid Carolin, his production company partner. Lauren Shuler Donner and Simon Kinberg are also producers, as you’d expect. (Carolin and Tatum are also producers on both Magic Mike films, both of which Carolin wrote.)

    Chris Claremont created Gambit with Jim Lee for stories first published in 1990. He quickly became a fan-favorite amongst comics readers, and was introduced to younger audiences via the animated X-Men television series which ran through the mid-’90s.

    We don’t know much about plans for the film, however. The mutant, who can create and manipulate kinetic energy, and often combines that power with a skill throwing playing cards and other objects, could end up debuting in this film before showing up in an X-Men movie. That seems to be what Tatum wants, at least, but Bryan Singer and the various X-Men producers may end up pulling him in to Apolcalypse as an intro instead.

    Tatum recently said,

    We really do want to try our hardest to give something fresh. We’re obviously going to go to the saving-the-world superhero movies eventually, but maybe not for the first one. We kind of want to introduce this character in a very different way. When you try to do something different, you never really know right off the bat what that is. We’re feeling our way into it. And we really just gotta prove that concept of that person.

    The next X-Men film, X-Men: Apocalypse, is set for release on May 27, 2016.

    The post Channing Tatum ‘Gambit’ Film Will Be Based on a Chris Claremont Treatment appeared first on /Film.

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  • Watch Sofia Coppola’s Adorable Gap Holiday Campaign

    Watch Sofia Coppola’s Adorable Gap Holiday Campaign

    Sofia Coppola Gap

    I know, I know: Halloween is way too early for Christmas marketing. But these charming Gap spots directed by Sofia Coppola don’t beat you over the head with their Christmas-iness. If anything, the unifying theme really seems to be “sweaters,” and that’s something we can get behind in these chilly fall days. Besides, you can think of them as a sort of appetizer for Coppola’s other upcoming holiday project, a TV special with Bill Murray.

    Watch the Sofia Coppola Gap ads after the jump.

    The tagline for Coppola’s Gap holiday commercials is “You don’t have to get them to give them Gap,” so all of these ads tell a little story about embracing quirks and awkward moments. Because isn’t that what the holidays are about, really? Spending days cooped up in a house with people you love but don’t quite understand?

    Can’t you just imagine Bill Murray killing a lip-sync version of “Cry” by Johnnie Ray, like in the first ad up top?

    It’s usually luxury brands that hire big-name directors for their ad campaigns. Everyone from Wes Anderson to Martin Scorsese has done a high-end perfume ad, for example. But Gap certainly seems to have an appreciation for fine filmmakers. Their fall campaign was directed by David Fincher in between shooting Gone Girl and releasing Gone Girl. Fincher’s spots were basically the opposite of Coppola’s — cool, dark, mysterious, and devoid of color.

    The Coppola ads look like a fun take on Gap’s overarching “Dress Normal” campaign. Gap, it seems, is so normal it brings everyone together, from pinball-playing rebels to pint-sized hams. “Our aim was to create a campaign that would be very warm, very honest and very Gap,” says Gap CMO Seth Farbman. “And even if you don’t always get your family, our message this season is that it’s easy to give them Gap.”

    The post Watch Sofia Coppola’s Adorable Gap Holiday Campaign appeared first on /Film.

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  • Rob Zombie Shoots ’31′ in February

    Rob Zombie Shoots ’31′ in February

    Rob Zombie 31

    Rob Zombie launched a crowdfunding campaign for a new film, 31, earlier this year. (The film’s title, perhaps obviously, references Halloween, but this is not a Halloween film.)

    That campaign, despite launching with an undefined financial goal, was evidently a success. Now Zombie is pushing forward with international sales planned for the American Film Market, starting next week. And then, assuming things go well the film, about a kidnapped group of people forced to compete in and hopefully survive a place called Murder World, will shoot in February of next year.

    THR has news about the AFM sales. The plot as we know it is:

    Five carnival workers are kidnapped the night before Halloween and held hostage in a large secret compound known as Murder World, where they have 12 hours to survive a game called 31 in which murderous maniacs dressed as clowns are released to hunt them down and kill them.

    The concept art above is from Zombie’s early crowdfunding push, and you can see a lot more art where that came from. (Much of it is very not safe for work.)

    Zombie says of the film,

    I love movies about Halloween, in fact my first film, ‘House Of 1000 Corpses,’ is set on Halloween. In looking for a new angle I found that more people go missing and are never found this day than any other in the year. I thought that’s a good premise for a film. Add in the fact that everyone I know seems to really hate clowns and now you got a film and without the fans raising funds and helping to build buzz, a crazy film like this would have been almost impossible to get off the ground. I owe the fans big time on this one.

    There’s no cast info for 31 yet, and no potential release date. Though if the February shoot goes well, it’s not out of the question that we might see the film by next Halloween.

    The post Rob Zombie Shoots ’31′ in February appeared first on /Film.

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  • Interview: ‘Nightcrawler’ Director Dan Gilroy on Manipulation and Ditching the Character Arc

    Interview: ‘Nightcrawler’ Director Dan Gilroy on Manipulation and Ditching the Character Arc

    Dan Gilroy Interview

    It’s rare to see a directorial debut that is a total home run, but that’s Nightcrawler in a nutshell. The film’s writer/director, Dan Gilroy, is not, however, some rookie who got lucky. He’s been a screenwriter for years, with credits on films like The Fall, Real Steel and The Bourne Legacy. He was the writer on Tim Burton’s aborted Superman film with Nicolas Cage. And his family is in the business, too: brother Tony has his own screenwriting career, and is director of films like Michael Clayton and Duplicity; brother John edited films such as Warrior and Pacific Rim; and his wife Renee Russo needs no introduction.

    They all are part of Nightcrawler, in which Jake Gyllenhaal stars as a man who finds himself uniquely suited to compete in the world of independent cable news contractors. Gyllenhaal’s character Lou Bloom is taught the “if it bleeds it leads” axiom early on, and he runs with that concept. Renee Russo plays Nina, who buys Lou’s footage and helps shape his new career. Tony Gilroy produced, and John Gilroy edited.

    I sat down with Dan Gilroy to talk about the film, and admitted that, as horrible as the guy can be, I’m somewhat envious of Lou’s pure drive to succeed. We talked about sociopaths, the liberation that comes from ditching a traditional character arc, and the beauty of Los Angeles at night.

    Note: This interview is not spoilerish in a nuts and bolts sense — you won’t be given the plot. But we talk about the broad scope of the character and the concepts behind the film. So bookmark this one to return to after you’ve seen the film if you’d prefer to see Nightcrawler cold.  

    nightcrawler-BTS-4

    As a writer, do you start with the situation, or the character?

    I normally start with the situation. In this case the situation was there, because I had uncovered this world, but I didn’t start writing it then. I stepped back from it, and over a period of time the character started to develop. And when the characters started to speak I realized the movie wasn’t about the world, it was more about the character. And so it became more of a character study than I usually do, which felt really great to do.

    The script upends some technical “rules,” such as the notion that the main character should change.

    There’s no character arc! When I started to write the character I realized, “this guy isn’t going to change.” Every film you’re commissioned to write is all about an arc; usually the arc is that the world creates a change in the character, usually for the better. To not have an arc, the messages and ideas in the film became more prominent. The character is plowing through boundaries, and keeps going. So the boundaries become very clear, the things he’s crossing. And the focus on it is the world bending morally to what he’s doing. At the end, allowing him to succeed at what he has done, and celebrating his success. Raising questions: what does it say about us that we allow something like this to happen? It opened a lot of doors that a traditional arc doesn’t.

    What was the most important thing to communicate with this character?

    I believe that people like Lou are increasingly rewarded for what they do. I feel that in today’s world you will often find people with some sociopathic tendencies who are succeeding on a corporate level. I feel that the world is increasingly about the bottom line, and not so much about human respect or human dignity. In that regard, people who care about other people will not be in a position to make choices and do things that other people who they’re competing against will get to do. And I feel that the world is increasingly reduced to transactions, and that the human spirit is shoved aside to the point that — well, Lou understands that the world is about the bottom line. And accepts it! He has no family, and no connection to anything. It allows him to thrive, and to fully embrace the uber-capitalist concept, the ultimate hyper-free market. Which I feel is increasingly the world that we live in.

    He very rapidly transitions from labor to management.

    He is uniquely suited to management because he SO believes in the system. He believes that our experience on this planet, as sentient human beings, can be reduced to a climb up a ladder. To the acquisition of a job title. People who reach upper management in corporations or business — not all the time, there are many hard-working people who deserve everything they get, probably far more than not — but there are people who, like Lou, embrace the idea that it doesn’t matter what you do as long as you get it done. And I think that suits people for management in a lot of ways.

    I’m almost jealous of Lou, in that he so forcefully expects to get what he wants, and that it does all fall into place for him.

    When I was writing Lou, I thought “wow, it’s almost a dream that you could go through the world, do what you want, and not worry about the consequences.” Ultimately it’s hell, because I believe when you don’t care about other people you’re living in utter hell.

    But all the time that I invest in thinking about my relationships with other people, my relationship with my wife, my kids, people around me, people having problems, I worry about them, I can’t sleep at night. Lou has none of that! He is utterly unburdened. He wakes up every morning and it is just “what am I doing for me?” He doesn’t worry about anybody but him. And that is probably wish-fulfillment in some ways, for some people whose lives are consumed by worry and legitimate concern about people they love. Lou has none of that, and all the time that we invest in that, he invests in himself. I think it works much to his advantage.

    I wonder about an endpoint, or a crash for Lou. I’ve found myself thinking a lot about whether he could become a Rupert Murdoch figure.

    I believe he does. When I wrote it I did. I believe the people who get caught are the dumb ones. That the true sociopaths, the smart ones, you never see them. They live and die amongst us and you never know they’re true sociopaths. Because a sociopath is not just someone who doesn’t care about human emotion. They’re someone who understands people to the point that they can manipulate them to an extraordinary degree.

    Lou is a wonderful manipulator.

    He understands people the way a lion understands a gazelle. Everything about them. There’s nothing he doesn’t know about them. So, actually, I always thought it was ironic when Rick says “your problem is you don’t understand people.” Lou understands people to a degree that goes beyond anything Rick could imagine. On an animalistic level.

    One line really stuck out for me: Lou telling Rick “get out of your head, it’s a bad neighborhood.” It sticks in part because I project it onto Lou as well.

    Yeah, it is a bad neighborhood in Lou’s head.

    That line seems so specific; does it come from a particular place?

    It’s very funny you ask about that line! That line came from a friend of mine who’s a producer, a gentleman named Jon Peters (Superman Lives producer), and I worked with him a number of years ago. Jon used to say that sometimes. “Get out of your head, it’s a bad neighborhood!” And it always stuck with me. I loved the line, so I’ll credit Jon Peters with that line. And proudly so, I love the guy.

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    I love that the process of making a film about an isolated sociopath was a total family endeavor.

    I felt so supported to have a brother on either side — particularly one brother who started out as a writer and became a director. There was nothing I was experiencing that Tony [Gilroy, producer] couldn’t help me out with. And then my brother John is an amazing editor and I was working with him on the other side. So I feel supported on that side, they’re both extraordinarily talented. Then I had Renee [Russo], my wife, on set working. So it felt very comfortable to walk on set. I mean, there was still a lot of tension and stress. We’re working under…we didn’t have a lot of money and days were tight. But in the stress of it all it was nice to know that I was supported by people who I can trust. John was cutting as I went along, and he had an assembly [by the end] then we came in and worked on it afterward. We had a 16-week post. He was instrumental in crafting key, crucial sequences.

    What was the most difficult scene to lock down?

    There were two. One was when Nina was directing the story, telling the anchors to sell it harder. We had to cut and compress, and John compressed it in a way that was just amazing. And then the shootout and the chase, the way we crafted that and the way John put it together, the pacing of it and the angles we chose, I felt it showed a master hand on John’s part.

    Was the script solid when Jake came on?

    Script was written, Jake didn’t change a word. But Jake is my creative and collaborative partner in a lot of ways on this. I wanted to work with him, to bring his energy and creativity to the part. So we decided in our first meeting that we were going to rehearse. So we did that for months beforehand.

    I would go up to his house and the rehearsal process was really one of exploring and trying, and not being afraid of something not working. Jake is fearless that way, Jake is utterly fearless and wanting to try. I think directors can only be so lucky to work with someone like Jake if you’re open to it. If you’re willing to collaborate and share, for lack of a better term, the power of directing with an actor in the sense of allowing them to explore and do things, try things and do different takes. Having those in the can so in post you can string together something that is unique. Jake blew me away. Even now when I watch his performance I always see something different that he was doing. He’s a supreme talent.

    It seems like you’re in a wonderful position, working with him and Renee, to get something potentially very difficult — like the date sequence.

    The date from hell! That came from a lot of rehearsal and finding layers to the scene, realizing that she was vulnerable, and Jake realizing different points. It was like a chess game. That’s how we approached it; we shot for like 12 hours on that scene.

    nightcrawler-BTS-3

    How do you direct a movie that is so heavily bound to characters in cars?

    Cars are hard. A lot of that was working with Robert Elswit. We had a digital camera, the Alexa, and it’s just figuring out — you put these trays on either door, and you figure out how many cameras you’re going to have at any given time. You want to put a camera on the hood at times, but you don’t want to block the driver’s view. There are times Jake would be driving when the camera’s in front you have concerns; can he see or not? So the mechanics of figuring out what series you’re going to do shots in — basically saying ok, this angle first because there’s a right hand turn, or whatever, then just working out a shot list with Robert.

    How often was Jake driving?

    Jake was driving probably 75% of the time and he was getting towed (on a process trailer) probably 25%. We wanted Jake driving as much as possible because there’s a gravity to driving. And Jake is an excellent driver! Incredible driver. That thing at the end where he threads the car between a couple things, and does the pull, that’s Jake driving. He’s a superb driver, I don’t know if he took driving classes, because he’s really good at it.

    I found myself excited that Nightcrawler proves the nighttime city picture has got some kick left to it. I’d like to know more about how you and Elswit set the tone of the night shoots.

    We wanted to show LA in a way that it’s not traditionally shown. A lot of times LA is desaturated, and cement and freeways, and downtown. We wanted to capture more of the electricity of the place, the wilderness energy of it, the desert light that you can see forever.

    So we did a lot of wide-angle, we were opening up the camera to capture as much light as possible, and really bringing in a lot of detail in the background. It was shooting in places that you don’t normally see, allowing neon signs to register, doing as much deep focus as possible, never really using shallow focus. We wanted your eye to go as far back into the frame as possible. And we wanted to shoot LA to make it look physically beautiful as much as possible, to be honest. I find it to be a physically beautiful place in a lot of ways, between the mountains and the hills and snow and ocean.

    We had 80 locations in this movie, we shot all over LA. In 27 days, of which 24 were nights, in a row. We were on nights for weeks, it was a wild energy. LA at night is amazing, driving around LA at night there’s no traffic at all, ever. A lot of films go downtown. We didn’t go downtown; we never shot anything downtown because everyone does, and we wanted to show a different part. And Robert lives in Venice, we shot that scene just blocks from his house. He walked home that day, he loved it! But we would drive around for months before, we did a lot of that to find locations.

    Nightcrawler Jake Gyllenhaal

    For many people, awareness of this movie came out of the blue with that Craigslist promo. Whose idea was that?

    It was Jake’s idea to shoot the elevator pitch speech different times while we were shooting the movie. So that was Jake’s idea, which I loved. We started just shooting that whenever we could, we shot like five versions of it. We cut it together, put the music to it, and Open Road’s marketing people very wisely found Craigslist as the place to launch it. So that was their idea, and I loved it. Great idea! Open Road I think is doing a terrific marketing job. It really opened the door for us in a lot of ways.

    ***

    Nightcrawler is open in theaters today, October 31.

    NIGHTCRAWLER is a pulse-pounding thriller set in the nocturnal underbelly of contemporary Los Angeles. Jake Gyllenhaal stars as Lou Bloom, a driven young man desperate for work who discovers the high-speed world of L.A. crime journalism. Finding a group of freelance camera crews who film crashes, fires, murder and other mayhem, Lou muscles into the cut-throat, dangerous realm of nightcrawling — where each police siren wail equals a possible windfall and victims are converted into dollars and cents. Aided by Rene Russo as Nina, a veteran of the blood-sport that is local TV news, Lou blurs the line between observer and participant to become the star of his own story.

     

    The post Interview: ‘Nightcrawler’ Director Dan Gilroy on Manipulation and Ditching the Character Arc appeared first on /Film.

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  • Canceled Starz Series ‘Magic City’ Becoming A Movie; Bruce Willis, Bill Murray Join Cast

    Canceled Starz Series ‘Magic City’ Becoming A Movie; Bruce Willis, Bill Murray Join Cast

    Magic City

    When a TV series is canceled, that’s usually the end. It’s only on rare occasions (Arrested Development, The Comeback, etc.) that it gets a second chance as a series and it’s even more rare that a canceled show gets turned into a movie (Firefly being the big, obvious example). Now, the Starz show Magic City is getting that elusive chance.

    Series creator Mitch Glazer has written and script and will direct a big screen version of the 1960s Miami based mob series. All the regulars will return – Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Danny Huston, Kelly Lynch etc. – and they’ll be joined by Bruce Willis and Bill Murray. This is pretty awesome news. Read more about the Magic City movie below.

    Deadline broke the news of the Magic City movie, which will be up for grabs at the American Film Market next week. Here’s a quote from Bill Block of QED:

    Mitch is a fantastic creative partner and we’re thrilled to collaborate with him again. We loved Magic City the series and know that with Mitch’s sensational script and this outstanding cast, it will translate beautifully to the big screen.

    Glazer said this:

    The chance to explore this wild time and place and this compelling family saga is a dream come true.

    Here’s the description of the first season of the show (it ran two years from 2012-2013):

    IKE EVANS is the king of 1959 Miami Beach and “uneasy lies the head that wears the crown.” Ike is locked in a life and death struggle with his suddenly not-so-silent partner, mob boss Ben “The Butcher” Diamond. Ike realizes that everything bad, everything wrong in his life began when, in desperation, he took Ben Diamond’s money to build his dream hotel, The Miramar Playa. Ike, seeing there is no way he can live with, no way he can survive this mob cancer, vows to rid himself of the Butcher… or die trying. He will risk everything, freedom and family, to win back the Miramar Playa and in the process learn the truth in the proverb – what good is it for a man to gain the world but lose his soul?

    I heard great, great things about the series when it was on but didn’t have Starz to check it out. I love the idea of this period mob type movie, especially with this cast, creative team, and level of familiarity. What do you think?

    The post Canceled Starz Series ‘Magic City’ Becoming A Movie; Bruce Willis, Bill Murray Join Cast appeared first on /Film.

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  • Video: Every Reference in ‘The Cabin in the Woods’

    Video: Every Reference in ‘The Cabin in the Woods’

    The White Board cabin in the woods references

    Ask any horror fan worth their weight in blood and they’ll say The Cabin in the Woods is one of the best horror films in the past few years. That’s mostly because it’s not only a horror movie. It’s a satire, a comedy, a mystery and a sci-fi action film all rolled into one. Written by Joss Whedon and Drew Goddard, The Cabin in the Woods is a film that lives and dies on not only the audience’s knowledge of horror films, but each character’s knowledge as well.

    A new video has been posted online that breaks that statement down. It attempts, and admittedly comes close, to calling out every single reference in The Cabin in the Woods. Check out The Cabin in the Woods references video below.

    Thanks to GoodBadFlicks for the great Cabin in the Woods references video. Did you pick up on all of these?

    The Cabin in the Woods References Revealed

    The post Video: Every Reference in ‘The Cabin in the Woods’ appeared first on /Film.

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