Showing posts with label Tom Hooper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Hooper. Show all posts

Friday, March 25, 2011

**Lily Collins Poised to Star Opposite Anton Yelchin in ODD THOMAS **Zack Snyder Says "300" Sequel Script is Finished **Tom Hooper Will Direct The Les Miserables Movie Musical **Paul Giamatti Signs On And Amy Adams Being Courted For A Role In Rock Of Ages

Lily Collins Poised to Star Opposite Anton Yelchin in ODD THOMAS

by Brendan Bettinger    Posted: March 24th, 2011

Lily Collins (The Blind Side) is the frontrunner to play Stormy Llewellyn in a feature adaptation of the Dean Koontz novel Odd ThomasVariety reports that Collins has emerged from a shortlist for the role that also included Emma Roberts, Kat Dennings, Portia Doubleday, and Addison Timlin.  Anton Yelchin (Star Trek) stars as Thomas, “a short-order cook with clairvoyant abilities who encounters a mysterious man with a link to dark, threatening forces.”  The story is set in a California desert town; Odd Thomas will shoot in Santa Fe, New Mexico in May under the direction of Stephen Sommers (G.I. Joe).
Read the book synopsis after the jump.



Zack Snyder Says "300" Sequel Script is Finished

Posted: March 25th, 2011 by WorstPreviews.com Staff
We've been hearing that Zack Snyder (Watchmen, 300) would direct a sequel to "300" if Frank Miller ever penned a sequel to the original graphic novel. Miller did exactly that, and Snyder kept his word by getting to work on the script.

But then Snyder was hired to direct the upcoming "Superman" reboot and has found himself incredibly busy. MTV just caught up with him and asked for an updated on the "300" sequel, called "Xerxes."

"['300' co-writer Kurt Johnstadt] and I have finished the script," he confirmed. "We have a script and it would be cool to make it." When asked if he'll direct it, Snyder replied: "We'll see. If I have time."

Source: MTV
 
 

Tom Hooper Will Direct The Les Miserables Movie Musical

published: 2011-03-24 20:06:57 Author: Katey Rich
Tom Hooper dutifully spent nearly six months promoting The King's Speech, turning the film from a festival darling into a Best Picture winner, and nabbing his own Best Director trophy in the process. Since February's Oscar ceremony Hooper has been keeping quiet and weighing his next move-- he wasn't attached to any new film before The King's Speech was released, but according to Deadline he may have finally figured out what he wants to do next.

As rumored back in February, around the same time he turned down the job of directing Iron Man 3, Hooper is making a deal at Universal to direct Les Miserables, an adaptation of the gigantic Broadway musical based on Victor Hugo's novel. There's no promise that it will definitely be his next film, but with production aiming to start before the year is over and a huge amount of pre-production required for a film this large, it kind of seems like the only choice.

The 1998 movie Les Miserables was only a take on the original Hugo story, which would make Hooper's film the first movie adaptation of the musical that's been running seemingly continuously worldwide since it opened in 1985. The epic story revolves around the French Revolution, focusing on the convict Jean Valjean-- arrested for stealing a loaf of bread-- and the dogged inspector, Javert, who wants him brought back to jail after breaking parole. Full of rousing speeches, plaintive ballads-- "On My Own," "Castle on a Cloud"-- and a showstopper attack on the Bastille, it's classic 1980s Broadway cheese, and yet, a story so large it kind of demands to be seen on the big screen.

Hooper has only two films behind him, the earlier one being The Damned United, and has no serious professional background in musical theater. But hey, the guy has an Oscar speaking to his talents, and nobody ever wants to invest in giant musicals anymore. If this is the next gamble Universal wants to take on an artist, I'll be happily singing along in the audience when it hits theaters. 
http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Tom-Hooper-Will-Direct-The-Les-Miserables-Movie-Musical-23857.html


Paul Giamatti Signs On And Amy Adams Being Courted For A Role In Rock Of Ages

published: 2011-03-24 15:00:32 Author: Eric Eisenberg
After the news came out yesterday that Warner Bros. would be releasing the Broadway musical adaptation of Rock of Ages onJune 1, 2012, director Adam Shankman sent out a Tweet saying, "I just heard the news: #rockofagesmovie is being released June 1, 2012. I guess I better start making it soon... Rehearsals start in 2 weeks." That could explain why two new bits of casting news just came up.

Deadline reports (in separate stories) is reporting that Paul Giamatti will be joining the cast and Amy Adams is being courted for a part in Rock of Ages. Giamatti will play the manager of Arsenal, the band led by Stacee Jax, who is being played by Tom Cruise; while Adams is being considered for the part that was offered to Anne Hathaway last month (who will be unavailable due to the fact that she will be playing with Batman in The Dark Knight Rises). Should the actress choose to accept the part, she will play a journalist who ends up sleeping with Jax.

While I'm not exactly what you'd call a "musical kind of guy," I must say that I am impressed by the names being put together so far. In addition to the above, Mary J. Blige, Alec Baldwin, Russell Brand, and Julianne Hough have all been locked in and it's hard for me to be too upset about a soundtrack that includes Twisted Sister, Journey and Pat Benatar. You have to wonder who will pop up next.

http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Paul-Giamatti-Signs-On-And-Amy-Adams-Being-Courted-For-A-Role-In-Rock-Of-Ages-23852.html

Thursday, February 24, 2011

**Patrick Wilson and James Marsden in Talks for LOFT **Exclusive: Emily Blunt on Why She Hasn’t Done a Superhero Movie **5 Movie Clips from DRIVE ANGRY 3D Starring Nicolas Cage, Amber Heard and William Fichtner **THE KING’S SPEECH Director Tom Hooper May Next Tackle LES MISERABLES; Was Offered IRON MAN 3

Exclusive: Emily Blunt on Why She Hasn’t Done a Superhero Movie

by Adam Chitwood    Posted: February 23rd, 2011

Whenever a big superhero project is announced, whether it be Zack Snyder’s Man in Steel reboot, Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Rises, or pretty much just any big budget movie involving crime-fighting and costumes, an inevitable “short-list” of actresses pops up full of names that are being considered to take on the female lead role in the film. This list usually has the same 5 or 6 actresses on it, and most of the time Emily Blunt’s name is included. Such big budget films that Blunt’s name has been attached to include Captain America: The First Avenger and Iron Man 2, just to name a few.
Steve recently had the chance to sit down with the actress doing press for her new film The Adjustment Bureau.  Towards the end of the interview, he asked her if she thinks she’ll ever be in a Marvel movie, given her frequency on their short-lists.  While some try and deflect these kinds of questions, Blunt was very honest with her answer.  For more, hit the jump:
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5 Movie Clips from DRIVE ANGRY 3D Starring Nicolas Cage, Amber Heard and William Fichtner

by Adam Chitwood    Posted: February 23rd, 2011

Patrick Lussier’s (My Bloody Valentine 3D) revenge thriller Drive Angry 3D hits theaters this weekend, and Summit has sent over 5 clips from the film.  The flick stars Nicolas Cage, Amber Heard, David Morse and William Fichtner and tells the story of a tough-as-nails criminal who breaks out of Hell on a quest for redemption.  Hit the jump to check out the clips and you can click here for all our previous coverage which includes on set interviews and a lot more.
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THE KING’S SPEECH Director Tom Hooper May Next Tackle LES MISERABLES; Was Offered IRON MAN 3

by Adam Chitwood    Posted: February 23rd, 2011

Director Tom Hooper is currently in the last leg of the award season circuit for his Oscar juggernaut The King’s Speech. The film is poised to be a big winner come Sunday night, and there’s also a very good chance Hooper will walk away with the Best Director award (he won the DGA last month). Well now he’s starting to look ahead to his next project, and he might be taking on yet another decidedly European tale: a new version of the classic novel/Broadway musical Les Miserables.
24 Frames reports that the director is weighing an offer to helm a big-budget musical version of the story. Working Title, which also produced Atonement, is producing the film. More interesting, however, is a mention in the report that Hooper was offered the directing gig for Marvel’s Iron Man 3 before turning it down (Writer/director Shane Black eventually landed the job). A bold choice, I’d say, given that the director is decidedly fresh, with only a few low-key dramas under his belt. What do you think? Should Hooper follow up his Oscar-bait turn with Les Mis? Would he have been right for IM3?
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Patrick Wilson and James Marsden in Talks for LOFT

by Brendan Bettinger    Posted: February 23rd, 2011

Patrick Wilson and James Marsden are the cream of the crop for on-screen nice guys.  So obviously if they join forces, it will be a very dark and disturbing movie.  Variety reports that Wilson and Marsden are in talks to star in the indie thriller Loft, a remake of a 2008 Belgian film directed by Erik Van Looy.  Loft is a whodunit about five men who posess the only keys to a penthouse apartment designed for their adulterous needs.  The timeshare setup is strained when one friend discovers a dead woman shackled to the bed.  Van Looy will return to direct the English-language version of his film from an adapted script by Wesley Strick (A Nightmare on Elm Street).  Anonymous Content hopes to get Loft in front of cameras before the end of the year.
Hit the jump for the synopsis and trailer for the Belgian original.
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Thursday, February 17, 2011

***61st Berlin Film Festival - 'The King's Speech' Premiere ***Sarah Jessica Parker and Greg Kinnear on Set

61st Berlin Film Festival - 'The King's Speech' Premiere
Actors Helena Bonham Carter, Colin Firth,and director Tom Hoope attend the 'The King's Speech' Premiere during day seven of the 61st Berlin International Film Festival at Friedrichstadtpalast on February 16, 2011 in Berlin, Germany.
61st Berlin Film Festival - 'The King's Speech' Premiere
Actors Helena Bonham Carter, Colin Firth,and director Tom Hoope attend the 'The King's Speech' Premiere during day seven of the 61st Berlin International Film Festival at Friedrichstadtpalast on February 16, 2011 in Berlin, Germany.
( February 15, 2011 - Photo by Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images Europe) http://www.zimbio.com/pictures/WQp5kmcz5gr/61st+Berlin+Film+Festival+King+Speech+Premiere
 
 
 
Sarah Jessica Parker and Greg Kinnear on Set
Sarah Jessica Parker and Greg Kinnear share a laugh as they arrive on the Brooklyn set of "I Don't Know How She Does It". Sarah Jessica Parker and Greg Kinnear share a laugh as they arrive on the Brooklyn set of "I Don't Know How She Does It".
Sarah Jessica Parker and Greg Kinnear on Set
In This Photo: Sarah Jessica Parker
Sarah Jessica Parker and Greg Kinnear share a laugh as they arrive on the Brooklyn set of "I Don't Know How She Does It".
( February 16, 2011 - Photo by Bauer Griffin) http://www.zimbio.com/pictures/H4_DxiPyK-E/Sarah+Jessica+Parker+Greg+Kinnear+Set
 

Sunday, December 26, 2010

68th Annual Golden Globe Awards -- Best Director - Motion Picture

Saturday, November 27, 2010

***2011 Oscar Preview

2011 Oscar Preview

by Adam Chitwood    Posted:November 26th, 2010

Best Director
Frontrunners:
David Fincher – The Social Network
Danny Boyle – 127 Hours
Likely to be nominated:
Tom Hooper – The King’s Speech
Darren Aronofsky – Black Swan
Christopher Nolan – Inception
Outside contenders:
Joel & Ethan Coen – True Grit
Peter Weir – The Way Back
Lisa Cholodenko – The Kids Are All Right
The Best Director race is understandably similar to the Best Picture race at the moment. Fincher’s work in The Social Network shows masterful restraint, and Boyle managed to make a film which largely takes place in a small rock cavern visually invigorating. With The King’s Speech being a frontrunner for Best Picture, you can expect Hooper to be at the top of the list of the Director race. Of the 82 films that have won Best Picture, 60 of them have also won Best Director, so these two categories are very closely tied together. And with the list of Best Picture nominees expanded to ten, many look to this category to determine the 5 “real” Best Picture nominees. It would be surprising if either Aronofsky or Nolan were overlooked; both of their films are obviously Director-driven, not to mention wholly original. If True Grit lives up to the hype, expect the Coen brothers to be nominated as well. Weir could be the wild-card in this category. He’s been nominated for Best Director four times in his career, and is something of an Academy favorite.  Then again, it’s also conceivable to think that someone like Cholodenko or David O. Russell could pick up the last slot.

http://www.collider.com/2010/11/26/2011-oscar-preview/#more-62096

***Director Tom Hooper Exclusive Interview THE KING’S SPEECH ***New Posters for THE GREEN HORNET and FROM PRADA TO NADA

Director Tom Hooper Exclusive Interview THE KING’S SPEECH

by Steve 'Frosty' Weintraub    Posted: November 26th, 2010

the_green_hornet_poster_taiwan_slice
Opening today, in limited release, is one of the best films of the year and something that’s absolutely getting nominated for every major award: director Tom Hooper’s The King’s Speech.  I caught a screening at the Toronto Film Festival and was floored by how much I loved the film.  In fact, after the Festival ended, only two films stayed with me: The King’s Speech and Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan.
If you never saw the trailer, it’s based on the true story of King George VI (Colin Firth) and how he overcame a debilitating speech impediment with the help of an eccentric speech therapist (Geoffrey Rush).   The film also stars Helena Bonham Carter as Firth’s wife, and Guy Pearce, Derek Jacobi, Timothy Spall and Michael Gambon.
While I’ve seen a lot of great performances this year, Firth, Rush, and Bonham Carter are all at the top of their game and all three are getting nominations.  Anyhow, I recently had the chance to talk with director Tom Hooper and after the jump you can either read or listen to what he had to say.  We talked about casting, editing, film vs. digital, awards, working for HBO (he did John Adams), what he has coming up, and a lot more:
And one last thing before the interview.  One of the many reasons why I loved The King’s Speech is the way Hooper shot the movie.  Often when I watch a period piece, I’m left thinking that I just watched a Lifetime movie, or something that could have been on HBO on a Saturday night.  But Hooper has elevated what could have been a simple story to something that absolutely belongs on movie screens.
Of course having incredible performances from Firth and Rush help elevate the material, but his use of selective close-ups and interesting camera angles made the story came to life.  Again, The King’s Speech is one of the best films I’ve seen this year and it’s absolutely worth checking out.
As usual, I’m offering two ways to get the interview,  You can either read the transcript below or click here to listen to the audio of our phone conversation.  Finally, you can also watch some clips from The King’s Speech here.
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Collider: Are you enjoying your weekend of press?
Tom Hooper: [laughs] It feels like it gets more brutal as the years go by and not less.  Just the amount and intensity of it.  But the good thing is that it’s an interesting film to talk about, and there’s a lot to talk about, which is nice.
I saw your film at the Toronto International Film Festival and I absolutely really loved it.  Everyone I speak to who sees the movie…I haven’t heard a bad word.  Are you dumbfounded by the critics and everyone jumping up and down for it?
Hooper: It has been a pretty astonishing and overwhelming response.  I mean, there’s no way you can predict this kind of response because it has been overwhelming. Particularly in the first two festivals – Telluride and Toronto – where it started.  It was extraordinary and amazing.  I spent months locked in dark rooms and you hope that it will play well, but you can never expect that kind of reaction.  What I really like is sitting with audiences and it really makes people laugh in such a common way.  It really makes people cry and it transports people.  I find that after a screening, people really want to come and tell you what they feel.  They feel really passionate about it, and that’s fantastic.
A lot of period movies feel like you could be watching them on the Lifetime channel.  They have no cinematic depth.  But your movie has a lot of cinematic depth and it belongs on a movie screen.  Can you talk about what you did as a director to prepare so that it would be cinematic and not something that you would want to watch on Lifetime?
Hooper: That’s interesting.  I think one of the things I worked on early was the close-up because of the amount of dialogue and the nature of the emotions that Helena was going to go through.  The film’s language was going to be the close-up.   There’s no point fighting that because the cinematic close-up was going to be key.  So therefore, I thought a lot about how to make the close-up cinematic.  Because it can be frustrating shot to frame because in composition terms, it’s the face.  If you look at classic Hollywood films, they tend to shoot close-ups on quite long lenses and the background it out of focus.  You know, it’s just a mush.  So I decided early on that I would consider shooting the close-ups on wider lenses in all.  What that does is that, even in the close-up, it draws the art direction and set location into the frame.  And the face still remains in communication with the space, which I think is more cinematic.  There was particularly a French film I saw years ago called Man Against the World where there were these wonderful simple frame close-ups against wallpaper in a room, which were incredibly powerful.  I think of Wong-kar Wai in 2046, who does simple compositions of people.  It’s a futuristic movie, but he can shoot someone in mid-shot in a hallway, and the texture of that always fascinates me.  It feels very cinematic. More than that, I also began to think, “What is the visual analog?  It’s stammering.  How do I find a way to shoot Colin that will underline his predicament?”  I began to think that if you’re a stutterer, it’s about inhabiting silence, emptiness, and nothingness.  Therefore, is there a way visually of talking about that?  So I wanted to put Colin’s face in these close shots in constant relation to negative space.  So I used these big empty walls in the consulting room in Logue’s apartment and framed Colin against these big empty walls.  Sometimes, he’s small against in the corner with the wall above and overpowering him.  Sometimes, there’s just a lot of head room.  I like that the idea of the conversation and communication behind nothingness is blasted all in the therapy room.  Then, if you look at what I’m doing on Geoffrey’s side, Geoffrey is against in the therapy room…it’s sort of a room like a fireplace.  It’s all of his pictures, wall, and papers.  It’s domestic and it’s cozy.  I watched them make that kind of division in the close-up language between these two men and the worlds they came from.
Can you talk about the editing process?  How long was it for you in the editing room and did you do test screenings or friends and family screenings?
the_kings_speech_imageHooper: We finished shooting the film in late January of this year.  Tariq Anwar is a superb editor.  I mean, he cut American Beauty and The Madness of King George.  He’s hugely experienced.  I think the rhythm of his editing is astonishingly good.  We had a pretty good cut probably 7 or 8 weeks out from the shoot.  We tested a cut in New York in April with Harvey Weinstein and we actually got a 93 percent on our New York test, which is very rare I’m told.  So I then said to Harvey, “Maybe this is a New York sophisticated thing?  I want to know if this plays in somewhere unlike New York” So he set up a test screening in Kansas City and extraordinarily the same result came back with 93 percent in terms of audience response.  But I found that test very useful because there were definitely things about the history that people didn’t know.  For example, the audience didn’t even know that Wallis Simpson was American unless if you pointed it out.  So I definitely had to deal with the work to make sure that the history side was clear because I think I was assuming more knowledge that people had.  So the testing process was both very encouraging because of our scores, but also helpful in terms of the clarity of the storytelling.  I think we locked up our edit in early May.  So it was a good rhythm.  It was okay.
This is sort of a jokey question, but the last few people that have worked with you have all won Golden Globes.  Basically, actors that work for you win awards.  Are you sort of just going to start printing out cards or something reminding people when you are looking to cast?
Hooper: If you look at the cast I assembled for this, it’s such great actors in really quite small roles.  Like, Sir Michael Gambon came in for two scenes.  You know, I got Timothy Spall to come in for three scenes.  I think what happens is that actors get quite loyal to you.  There’s loyalty with people that you’ve worked with before. My two great loves when I’m shooting are working with great actors and composing images.  I love being around particularly great clever actors.  So I just hope that if this continues to happen, it will just help encourage other good actors I can work with so that they can perhaps work with me.
I really enjoyed your work on John Adams. Can you talk about the involvement you had on that show and working with HBO?
Hooper: Well, I directed all 9 hours of it.  So it was my 18th century Lord of the Rings except I didn’t have armies of Orcs to contend with.  It was a vast show.  It was an extraordinary privilege to be making this thing knowing that it was going out during the U.S. primaries and knowing that there wasn’t much else being made.  I had this opportunity I felt with the show to trace back this origin of this incredible schism in American physical values and see if you could trace this divide back to the personalities of the founders.  I think that HBO is an extraordinary entity in that it was willing to spend over a hundred million dollars in telling the story of the non-famous founding father.  Because let’s not forget that before the miniseries, John Adams was the kind of guy who was not on the pedestal.  He was not iconic in the way that Washington, Jefferson, and Franklin were.  Adams knew that in his own lifetime and I loved the subveresiveness of that.  In some ways, there is a quality in my work where I like choosing the subversive way to these famous iconic stories.
I think that the series is tremendous.  Have you talked to HBO or others about doing another miniseries on that level or was the time involved just so great that you’re almost apprehensive to go back?
Hooper: I have already started talking to them about something.  It’s not for the immediate…it’s a little bit down the line, but I would definitely go back.  But I hope that the industry is maturing to the place where there is not a snobbery distinction between film and television because it’s about the story.  If your story is John Adams, you can’t tell it as a movie.  You need 8 or 9 hours to do it justice.  If the story is The King’s Speech, it tells beautifully as a movie.  I think that you need to pick the medium for the story and not try to shoehorn big stories into films, and equally not try to stretch out the same stories into 8 hours.  I think that’s the right way to be.
I read a quote of yours where you are basically mentioning how English TV was so amazing a few decades ago and how American television has really now stepped up.  I would argue that is probably the golden age of TV with the abundance channels and the stories you are able to tell.
Hooper: I mean, The Wire was the most phenomenal achievement. You know, in terms of an anatomy of an urban culture in America told over 70 or 80 hours.  I do think it’s in large part down to HBO.  I don’t know if you know, but the founder of the BBC, Lord Reith, had this idea that television is here to inform, educate, and entertain.  This is something that commercial broadcasters haven’t really embraced.  HBO almost seems to be adopting those wonderful ideals of the early BBC.  That it’s not about just entertainment.  It’s about educating and informing, and yet doing it while making a ton of money for its shareholders.  It seems to have squared the circle.  Growing up, I tended to think that if you’re being commercial you couldn’t be intelligent.  Or if you’re being commercial, you couldn’t educate or challenge.  And HBO always had that confidence that you can.  In some ways, the way I made The King’s Speech shows my confidence.  What HBO taught me in terms of America was that there’s a very large clever audience out there, and you don’t need to talk down to them.  HBO never wanted me to simplify anything because they were worried that audiences wouldn’t understand it.  HBO always assumes that their audience is bright.  I like working with that assumption and The King’s Speech is made with that assumption.  I hope that if it is successful it proves that there is a bright audience out there that is big.
I definitely have to address this with you.  I’ve covered movies for a number of years now, and I’m beyond confident that your film is getting nominated for Best Picture.  Your actors are going to get recognition and you’re going to get recognition.  It’s a very special movie.  Can you talk about how you’re heading towards that line?  I don’t mean to put it out there or jinx anything because your film is unjinxable.
the_kings_speech_movie_poster_01Hooper: I kind of want to take it everyday as it comes and not make any assumptions.  You know, I’m just thrilled at the response we’ve had and the awards we’ve won.  The Audience Award at Toronto was an unbelievable thing to win – to be voted by in a popular vote.  At the moment, I just hope people go see it when it gets released on Thanksgiving and that people discover it because I know that it’s a really entertaining, absorbing, humorous, and moving night out at the cinema.  Having seen how profoundly people respond to it, I would be crazy to not want everyone to see it.  You know, it’s very democratic.  I mean, it plays the same in England as it plays in America as it plays in Canada.  It’s equally funny to lots of different audiences and it seems to make people cry, whoever they are.  I think that it’s very special when you have one of those films that seems democratic that includes everyone instead of excluding some people.
I definitely want to know your thoughts on 3D.  Do you view as a gimmick or do you view it as something that is going to be here to stay for awhile?  Are you thinking about maybe doing a period piece or a future project in that format?
Hooper: I think it’s here to stay.  I can’t say this for America, but in England, if you look at investment Murdoch has made on Sky Television to bring 3D TV into the mass marketplace.  That’s a pipeline that is going to need feeding.  With people making that kind of investment, I think it’s here to stay.  I suppose, for me, good films create the illusion of 3D anyway.  I mean, when you’re watching The King’s Speech, you don’t keep going. “…but this is only 2D.” You know, because if you’re inside the story, you forget all that.  It becomes very real to you.  So I think that not every film will end up being made in 3D.  I think that it will always be types of films that are best served.  But I do think it’s a huge exciting new development.  If it helps rejuvenate the cinema, which it appears to be, that’s only good.
What are your thoughts on film vs. digital?
Hooper: Well, it’s interesting.  I still capture on film.  This is shot on 35mm.  I’ve never actually yet shot on digital, but I am a fan of digital cinema projection.  So my favorite route is to capture on 35mm and to project digitally because of the consistency of this digital projection system and it’s faithfulness to the way I graded it is so impressive.  I was with Ridley (Scott) on Friday and we were talking about it.  He was saying that he’s a convert to digital projection as well just because it’s much more faithful to the way you want to see the film come out.
Can you talk about the casting process?  Did you get your first choices and can you talk about those initial meetings?
Hooper: I think with Colin, I was just very lucky that I ended up with the right man doing it.  I think that the success of the film is a real testament of him being the right cast.  I’m such a believer that you got to get the casting right.  Not 10 percent off, but true and right.  It’s tough to do because there’s only a certain number of actors who can attract the finance and who are also great. But I think that across the board, but in particular those central choices of Helena, Colin, and Geoffrey there’s something very right about them, which is why I think the film is playing well.
What you are thinking about for future projects? And has the success of the movie lead to you having more meetings in “Hollywood”?
Hooper: I mean, I have a ton of scripts sent to me.  At the moment, I’m frankly struggling to catch up.  I’m reading through all of the scripts.  So I haven’t decided on what I’m going to do next, but my first job is to catch up on the reading that I’m behind on.
Has it lead to you all of a sudden having more meetings at different studios?
Hooper: Without a doubt.
Have you enjoyed it or is it like being the one that everyone wants to date?
Hooper: I haven’t thought about it like that.  Yeah, but the problem remains that it’s hard to find great scripts and great material.  The truth is that The King’s Speech, which is great material, people weren’t lining up to finance it.  It was thanks to people like Harvey that it did get financed.  I’m not naïve, there’s maybe material that I want to do that is still hard to finance.  So I think that it remains that whatever success you have, it doesn’t necessarily mean your films can be financed easily.
http://www.collider.com/2010/11/26/tom-hooper-interview-the-kings-speech/




New Posters for THE GREEN HORNET and FROM PRADA TO NADA

by Brendan Bettinger    Posted:November 26th, 2010

Two new posters this Friday, both international in their own right.  The first, for The Green Hornet, is so in the more traditional sense: it comes from Taiwan.  The masked superhero film stars Seth Rogen, Jay Chou, Cameron Diaz, and Christoph Waltz; Michel Gondry (Be Kind Rewind) directing.
The second poster, for From Prada to Nada, reaches across the border with a Latina take on the Jane Austen classic Sense & Sensibility.  The adaptation stars April Bowlby, Camilla Belle, Alexa Vega, Wilmer Valderrama, and Nicholas D’Agosto.  Hit the jump for both posters.
You’ll notice that the Taiwan-born Chou is front and center on this poster.  Chou is a major star throughout Asia as both a musician and actor, so I imagine he dominates the marketing campaign in that region.  Probably not a bad idea, since Kato is simply the cooler main character, regardless of the actor.
The Green Hornet opens January 14, 2011 in the U.S.  (January 28th in Taiwan.)  Courtesy of Yahoo! Taiwan [via IMP Awards]:
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“Britt Reid (Seth Rogen), son and heir to Los Angeles’ largest newspaper fortune, is a rich, spoiled playboy who has been happy to maintain a direction-less existence. When his father James Reid (Tom Wilkinson) dies, Britt meets an impressive and resourceful company employee, Kato (Jay Chou). They realize that they have the resources to do something worthwhile with their lives and finally step out of James Reid’s shadow. Kato builds the ultimate weapon, The Black Beauty, an indestructible car with every weapon imaginable and Britt decides that in order to be heroes, they will pose as villains. With the help of Britt’s new secretary, Lenore Case (Cameron Diaz), they learn that the chief criminal in the city is named Benjamin Chudnofsky (Christoph Waltz). He has united all the gangs under his power, and he quickly sees that the Green Hornet is a direct threat to the prosperous criminal underworld he controls.”
From Prada to Nada opens on January 28, 2011.  Via IMP Awards:
from_prada_to_nada_poster
A Latina version of Jane Austen’s classic novel set in modern-day Los Angeles. Two sisters, one a young beauty who chooses passion over logic, the other a law student whose fixed moral compass keeps her from following her desires, are uprooted from their luxurious home when their father suddenly passes away. Out of money and out of options, the women move into their Great Aunt Aurelia’s modest, but lively home in the Latino-centric Boyle Heights neighborhood where they find themselves thrown into a world that, despite their heritage, seems completely foreign. Over time, they discover the beauty of the culture they once fought so desperately to hide. And in the process they find the one thing that had eluded them: love.

http://www.collider.com/2010/11/26/the-green-hornet-poster-from-prada-to-nada-poster/
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