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A promo poster for Nicolas Winding Refn and Ryan Gosling's Only God Forgives

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Following their critically acclaimed collaboration on Drive, filmmaker Nicolas Winding Refn and actor Ryan Gosling are set to reunite next year for the crime flick Only God Forgives, and thanks to The Film Stage we now have what could be the first promotional poster from the film, which depicts a battered and bloody Gosling sporting a shiner that wouldn't look out out of place on the Elephant Man...


Here's the official synopsis:

Bangkok. Ten years ago Julian (Gosling) killed a cop and went on the run. Now he manages a Thai boxing club as a front for a drugs operation. Respected in the criminal underworld, deep inside, he feels empty. 

When Julian’s brother murders a prostitute the police call on retired cop Chang - the Angel of Vengeance. Chang allows the father to kill his daughter’s murderer, then ‘restores order’ by chopping off the man’s right hand.

Julian’s mother Jenna (Kirsten Scott Thomas) - the head of a powerful criminal organization - arrives in Bangkok to collect her son’s body. She dispatches Julian to find his killers and ‘raise hell’. 

Increasingly obsessed with the Angel of Vengeance, Julian challenges him to a boxing match, hoping that by defeating him he might find spiritual release… but Chang triumphs. A furious Jenna plots revenge and the stage is set for a bloody journey through betrayal and vengeance towards a final confrontation and the possibility of redemption.

Only God Forgives is expected to hit cinemas some time next year.

Colin Trevorrow denies Star Wars Episode VII directing rumours

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Another day, another twist in the Star Wars Episode VII director saga...

Fresh from the news yesterday that Brad Bird (Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol) had joined reported Lucasfilm targets J.J. Abrams (Star Trek Into Darkness) and Steven Spielberg (Lincoln) in denying any interest in helming Disney's first voyage to a galaxy far, far away, an interview with Colin Trevorrow (Safety Not Guaranteed) from back in June surfaced online via Film School Rejects, which seemed to indicate that the Safety Not Guaranteed director may have already signed on to the project:

"I can’t speak with any specificity as to what the next thing will be. There are amazing opportunities that have arisen as a result of this. One of them, I will say, will probably create a good deal of ire against me on the Internet when people find out what it is. So, I just want to say in advance that I promise you, for all those who love the mythology that I will be tackling, trust that I love it as much as you do. And I will respect it, and hopefully make it not suck."

Sure sounds like Star Wars, right? Wrong, as Trevorrow has since taken to Twitter to offer the following clarificiation:


So, it would seem that we can now scratch another name off the Episode VII shortlist, unless Trevorrow's just trying to throw us off the scent, of course. After all, he wouldn't be the first person to pull those odds off. Still, assuming his comments do refer to another beloved property, any ideas what this might be? I'm racking my brain here...

Four more actors under consideration for Harry Osborn in The Amazing Spider-Man 2

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Although it was reported last week that Sony were considering Dane DeHann (Chronicle), Brady Corbet (Melancholia) and Alden Ehrenreich (Beautiful Creatures) for the role of Harry Osborn in The Amazing Spider-Man 2, The Hollywood Reporter has revealed that the "producers and filmmakers now are seeking actors with characteristics that include athleticism and good looks" and according to THR's sources, four new candidates are now in contention and will test alongside Andrew Garfield for director Marc Webb.

According to THR's sources, the actors set to try out for Harry Osborn are Brits Sam Claflin (Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, Snow White and the Huntsman), Eddie Redmayne (My Week with Marilyn, Les Miserables) and Douglas Booth (Romeo and Juliet, Noah) and American Boyd Holbrook (Hayfields & McCoys, The Host). They will of course step into the role previously played by James Franco, who appeared as Harry in all three instalments of Sam Raimi's original Spider-Man trilogy.

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is due to begin filming in February from a script by Alex Kurtzman & Roberto Orci (Star Trek), Jeff Pinkner (Lost) and James Vanderbilt (The Amazing Spider-Man). Emma Stone is set to reprise the role of Gwen Stacy alongside Andrew Garfield's Peter Parker, while Shailene Woodley (The Descendants) has signed on as Mary Jane Watson and Jamie Foxx (Django Unchained) is thought to be in line to appear as the film's villain, Electro.

More teasing for Luther season 3

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It appears Idris Elba (Thor, Prometheus) likes to tease! Last month the British actor teased fans with the briefest of clips regarding the upcoming new series of the popular detective TV show Luther, and now via Twitter, we have another taster to reassure fans that shooting is finally underway on the third season:


The psychological TV drama Luther follows Idris Elba as the character John Luther, a rather obsessive, dangerous detective who often bends the law to bring the bad guys (and gals) down. We know from the official LutherFacebook page that season 3 will contain four “perfectly dark, chilling formed” episodes, and as for whether his murderous sidekick Alice will be back... only she knows!

Luther has been hugely popular both in the UK and America with the Hackney-born actor picking up a prestigious Golden Globe Award this year for his portrayal as the haunted detective. After the first two excellent seasons, there is no doubt that fans will be waiting for the arrival of this third season with much anticipation, so stay tuned for more information, as well as perhaps some further titbits from Elba!

Giveaway - Win Dara O Briain Craic Dealer on DVD

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First-class comedian and 2012 BAFTA nominee, Dara O Briain is back with his much anticipated brand new stand-up show, Craic Dealer Live 2012, available on DVD and Blu-ray from 12th November 2012 from Universal Pictures (UK), and to celebrate the release we have three copies of the DVD up for grabs in our latest giveaway. Read on for a synopsis and details of how to enter the competition...

Recorded at the illustrious Edinburgh Playhouse in May 2012, Craic Dealer Live 2012 is Dara back doing what he does best. The king of audience interaction returns to the stage where he relishes exchanging ultra rapid fire quips with members of the audience, and delivers witty and daring anecdotes like no other stand up comedian. The erudite O Brain ranges through countless topics from the state of the Irish economy, to married life and Tunnocks tea cakes.

Order Dara O Briain Craic Dealer here, and win amazing prizes and see the latest comedy clips at www.facebook.com/comedy.

© 2012 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved

To be in with a chance of winning, firstly make sure you like us on Facebook (or follow us on Twitter)...


...Then complete your details below, using the subject heading "DARA". The competition closes at midnight on Saturday, December 1st. UK entrants only please.

 
 By entering this competition you agree to our terms and conditions, which you can read here.

Billy Boyd looks forward to seeing The Hobbit Trilogy

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With The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey set to arrive on the big screen on December 14, 2012 and The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (2013), and The Hobbit: There and Back Again (2014) soon to follow, one wonders how many actors will reprise their roles from the original The Lord of the Rings trilogy created by J.R.R. Tolkien.  Ian McKellen (Gods and Monsters) who received an Academy Award nomination for his performance of Gandalf will don the wizard hat and staff again, and Hugo Weaving (Cloud Atlas) is returning along with Cate Blanchett (The Aviator) to portray Elrond and Galadriel from the Elves of  Rivendell.  Elijah Wood (Bobby) makes a brief appearance as his character of Frodo Baggins helps to serve as bridge between the old and new set of films where his uncle Bilbo portrayed by Martin Freeman (The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy) takes centre stage.


But will Frodo be accompanied by his pint-sized friends who travelled with him on his epic journey to save Middle-earth from Sauron?.  "I wouldn't think so but who knows now that it is a trilogy," states Billy Boyd (Irvine Welsh's Ecstasy) who played the part of the mischievous and beer-loving Peregrin 'Pippin' Took.   "The Hobbits [Frodo, Sam, Pippin and Merry], don't appear in The Hobbit.  I am really looking forward to seeing the first one and am going to see that soon.  I'm sure they're going to be wonderful movies."  However, there is one thing Boyd knows for sure as he speaks from his home in Scotland.  "I'm looking at the cover of the new album from my band Beecake and it is called Blue Sky Paradise; that will be out pretty soon.  It is not on iTunes yet although our first album is but you can pre-order the album on Beecake.com.  I would say do that because it's musical goodness!"



Movie Review - Few Words (2012)

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Few Words, 2012.

Directed by Matt Pain.
Starring Candide Thovex.



SYNOPSIS:


A fresh insight into the illustrious career (and personality) of French Ski Legend Candide Thovex, from his triple gold X Games success to a major back injury and resulting World Freeride Championship glory.


It’s been a long time coming. Two years, to be precise. Two years and over a thousand hours of footage come together to create the much anticipated feature documentary spanning ski legend Candide Thovex’s life and career thus far – Few Words. Winner of three X Games Gold medals, and World Freeride champion in 2010 (despite breaking his back in 2007), Thovex was finally granted his own movie courtesy of long time sponsor - Quiksilver.

There has been a certain anticipation building up to the release of Few Words. Six months previously a teaser trailer swarmed the Internet. The soundtrack was sober, the footage was unreal and the cinematography was stunning. This was the skier’s ‘Art of Flight’.

From the offset Few Words certainly looks the part. The vast mountainous forests of British Colombia roll on as a camera pans the snow-laden landscape with breathtakingly stunning views. Director Matt Pain combines thought provoking cinematography and a penchant for slow motion action to add to the ‘wow’ factor.

With aesthetic success, it is in the action however where Few Words stutters in delivery. As an exhilarating opening sequence calms into generics of documentary filmmaking, skiing sequences become too few and far between. Though what action we get is ‘epic’ in its own right: jumping ‘Chad’s Gap’, extreme big mountain skiing, slicing off a snowman’s head with the edge of a ski whilst in the air to name but a few eye widening scenes; the sombre use of a soundtrack along with a consistent ‘sandwiching’ of interviews and archive footage fails to pack a punch. There is too much talking, too much describing, too little momentum and not enough avalanches. From the powerhouse of a trailer, Few Words just doesn’t seem to step up to the mark. It becomes quickly apparent that this is quite simply not The Art of Flight.

With a world tour of premieres spanning from Europe to Canada, Thovex is hitting his audiences hard. Such a false advertisement in the trailer however may leave viewers disconcerted, as well as feeling a little cheated. To consider Few Words as a documentary, I can only congratulate. The viewer is taken on an intriguing journey tale of a legend that most ski enthusiasts would feel privileged to be a part of. It is however quite important to state that this is not a ‘Ski Movie’.

Flickering Myth Rating - Film: ★ ★ / Movie: ★ 

Sara Bentley

First poster for the Evil Dead remake

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Remaking a beloved horror movie is always a risky proposition, but that hasn't deterred producers Sam Raimi, Bruce Campbell and Rob Tapert from crafting a new version of their 1981 cult horror The Evil Dead, with director Fede Alvarez taking us back to the cabin in the woods this coming spring for what promises to be "The Most Terrifying Film You Will Ever Experience" - at least, according to the first poster, which has just arrived online today:


Overlooking the rather bold tagline, Evil Dead does appear to be shaping up very well indeed, with the first red band trailer generating plenty of excitementwhen it arrived online at the back end of last month, and with the original trio of Raimi, Campbell and Tapert overseeing things behind the scenes, there's a growing expectation that the upcoming film could deliver a much-needed shot in the arm to the horror genre.

Evil Dead features a cast of up-and-coming talent that includes Jane Levy (Suburgatory), Shiloh Fernandez (Red Riding Hood), Lou Taylor Pucci (Carriers), Jessica Lucas (Cloverfield) and Elizabeth Blackmore (Legend of the Seeker), and is due for release on April 12th, 2013.

The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2 knocks Skyfall from the top of the UK box office

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UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 16th - Sunday 18th November 2012...

After three fantastic weeks atop the UK box office, it was inevitable that Skyfall's reign would come to an end this past weekend as The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2 (read our reviews here and here) arrived in cinemas, bringing the curtain down on the lucrative vampire romance series with a franchise high of £15,850,825. This was also the second-biggest opening weekend of 2012 behind 007's latest adventure (£20.2m), besting the likes of The Avengers (£15.8m), The Dark Knight Rises (£14.3m) and The Amazing Spider-Man (£11m).

Despite slipping to second, Skyfallpulled in another £5.57m (a record fourth weekend figure) to take its current gross to £82.8m, overtaking Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (£73.1m), Toy Story 3 (£73.9m) and Titanic (80.1m) to become the second-biggest film of all-time here in the UK; Bond now looks set to take aim at the number one spot, which is held by Avatar on£94m. Meanwhile Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted also slipped one place to third, crossing the £20m mark in its fifth weekend on screens.

Apart from Breaking Dawn - Part 2, three other newcomers debuted in the top ten in the trio of Bollywood offerings Jab Tak Hai Jaan (in fourth with £893,953), Son of Sardaar (eighth with £214,296) and Thuppakki (tenth with £134,280). Elsewhere, Argodropped two spots to fifth ahead of Paul Thomas Anderson's The Master, which marked its arrival in the top ten with a sixth-placed finish after expanding to cinemas nationwide. Hotel Transylvania followed in seventh, while Taken 2 finally fell from the top half of the chart, the action sequel slipping to ninth and now looking about ready for the count after pulling in a solid £23m+ during its run.

Number one this time last year: The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1

1. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2, £15,850,825 weekend (New)
2. Skyfall, £5,566,537 weekend; £82,836,559 total (4 weeks)
3. Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted, £966,116 weekend; £20,631,608 total (5 weeks)
4. Jab Tak Hai Jaan, £893,953 weekend (New)
5. Argo, £807,457 weekend; £2,828,888 total (2 weeks)
6. The Master, £372,360 weekend; £553,521 total (3 weeks)
7. Hotel Transylvania, £233,959 weekend; £7,580,744 total (6 weeks)
8. Son of Sardaar, £214,296 weekend (New)
9. Taken 2, £136,495 weekend; £23,335,974 total (7 weeks)
10. Thuppakki, £134,280 weekend (New)

Incoming...

There's no excuse for staying at home and playing on PartyCasino.com this week with plenty of new releases hitting UK cinemas; David O. Russell's Silver Linings Playbook (cert. 15) [review here] and Michael Hoffman's Gambit (cert. 12A) open on Wednesday, while Friday's newcomers include police thriller End of Watch (cert. 15) [review here] and festive comedy Nativity 2: Danger in the Manger! (cert. U), along with re-releases for David Lean's Lawrence of Arabia (cert. PG) and the anime classic Ninja Scroll (cert. 18).

Early Bane concept art from The Dark Knight Rises

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If there was one aspect of The Dark Knight Rises that left fans divided, then it was surely Tom Hardy's masked villain Bane. Overlooking the controversy surrounding his voice, Christopher Nolan's 'gritty and realistic' interpretation of Bane saw the character undergo a dramatic shift away from his comic book counterpart in terms of appearance, more so than any of the other DC characters brought to life in Nolan's Dark Knight universe (except for Robin, I guess).

Well, thanks to Screen Crush - who've got their hands on some images from a behind-the-scenes documentary from the upcoming home-entertainment release - we can now check out some early concept designs for Bane which show a more traditional, luchadore-style mask, as well as an early sketch for what became his eventual look...





The Dark Knight Rises is released on Blu-ray, DVD and Download on December 3rd here in the UK and December 4th in North America.


Holy Franchise, Batman! Bringing the Caped Crusader to the Screen - Available now via Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com.

Lawrence Kasdan and Simon Kinberg to write Star Wars Episodes VIII and IX

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Taking a break from all the speculation surrounding possible directors for Star Wars Episode VII for a moment, and Deadline has revealed that Disney has approached screenwriters Lawrence Kasdan and Simon Kinberg to tackle the scripts for Episode VIII and Episode IX, which will presumably be based upon the three-film outline already penned by Episode VII scribe Michael Arndt.

Kasdan is a name immediately recognisable to Star Wars fans, having scripted The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi, as well as another Lucasfilm hit, 1981's Raiders of the Lost Ark. His other writing credits include Body Heat, The Big Chill, Silverado, The Bodyguard, Wyatt Earp and Dreamcatcher, as well as the story for the 1996 cross-platform multimedia project Star Wars: Shadows of the Empire.

While he has no previous experience with Star Wars, Kinberg has written a number of blockbusters, with credits on the likes of Mr and Mrs Smith, X-Men: The Last Stand, Jumper, Sherlock Holmes and X-Men: First Class. He is currently producing Neill Blomkamp's sci-fi adventure Elysium, and is also busy writing and producing the First Class sequel X-Men: Days of Future Past.

Disney plans to generate a Star Wars film every other year beginning in 2015, meaning that we should expect to see Episode VIII arriving in 2017, followed by Episode IX in 2019.

Digging Up the Past: Frankenweenie Recreated in 3D

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Trevor Hogg chats with Richard Baker and Matt Bristowe from Prime Focus World about their work on Frankenweenie...


When a young animator made a live-action short film about a boy who resurrects his dead dog, his association with Disney came to an end as the dark tale was deemed too scary for children; years later the legendary animation studio rekindled a creative partnership with Tim Burton (Big Fish) which has resulted in a reimagining of Frankenweenie (2012) as a black and white stop-motion animated feature length film in 3D.  “It’s quite remarkable how true the animated feature is to the original,” observes Matt Bristowe, the Joint Managing Director of Stereo Conversion for Prime Focus World.  “There are key scenes, such as where Sparky gets run over, that play just as they do in the short; it’s nice to see that continuity.”  Richard Baker, the Creative Director of Stereo Conversion for Prime Focus World, agrees with his colleague.  “Yes, the original live-action film was a reference, and it’s amazing how close to the original some of the shots in the new film are. Also, you can see how the detail and the set design have carried through from the original to the stop-motion version. This story is obviously close to Tim’s heart, and Frankenweenie was a labour of love for him.”


Matt Bristowe
“The stop-motion animation industry is not huge, and Matt Bristowe had previously worked on other stop-motion projects with Frankenweenie producer Alison Abbate, as well as on Corpse Bride [2005] and Fantastic Mr. Fox [2009],” explains Richard Baker.  “We produced some test sequences for Tim [Burton] back in November 2010, and were selected to provide the conversion for Frankenweenie on that basis. We’ve been attached to the project from that point onwards [stop-motion films have a longer gestation period than live action!].”  Matt Bristowe adds, “Richard Baker and I work closely together on all aspects of our 3D projects. Tim would come in once a month to review sequences, and because we’d established the requirements and look for the stereo early on.   Richard was creatively in charge of the conversion which went smoothly. As the primary client-facing production executive on the project, my main role was to manage the global conversion system for the entire project.  This principally entailed working with the London and Mumbai teams to ensure that the production stayed on track throughout the conversion process, as well as reassuring the studio that it would deliver on time!”  In regards to how the various tasks were divided between the two facilities, Bristowe remarks, “The conversion teams in London and Mumbai are very much extensions of each other and the work tends to be allocated based on skill sets and strengths. Some scenes are particularly VFX heavy and some include finer points of detail. The scenes are allocated to whichever teams have the specialism in that area, be that in Mumbai or London or indeed in Vancouver. Also, our supervisors working under Richard were constantly travelling between the studios, helping Richard to ensure consistency across the whole project.” 


Richard Baker
“I had a number of early meetings with Tim Burton, to discuss both his expectations and my thoughts on the 3D for Frankenweenie,” says Richard Baker.  “As the sole conversion partner on the movie, PFW was given full creative control of the 3D; these meetings were important in establishing Tim’s trust in my vision for the use of depth in the movie. After the first review it became clear that Tim was happy, and confident that I was taking the 3D in a direction that was in-line with his creative vision; from that point onwards, he really gave me creative freedom to treat the depth as I saw fit. Tim Burton, [Visual Effects Supervisor] Tim Ledbury and I would meet and review sequences about once a week; the process worked smoothly with all three of us generally in agreement.”  Matt Bristowe, who was involved in making Wrath of the Titans [2012] and Harry Potter, notes, “From a creative point of view we’re learning all the time. Those two shows, and many others like them, helped us to build the skill levels of the artists and the technology overall.  You’re working on a big studio picture with certain expectations and tight deadlines; having said that, Frankenweenie was a different type of show to Wrath or Potter.  The nature of the stop-motion animation means long, lingering shots which allow your eye to take in the scene; this meant that much more attention had to be paid to the fine detail, which on a live-action show may have been lost in a quick pan or motion blur.” Bristowe remarks, “We had more latitude and creative freedom, in that respect, than we would normally have with a live-action show; it allowed us to play with the stereo in the sculpting of the characters’ big heads and enormous eyes.”  Baker believes, “This [project] required pixel perfect treatment of the depth to allow the full detail of the amazing sets to shine through on-screen. This conversion was about enhancing these environments and bringing them alive.”


“The black and white aspect of the movie, the high-contrast edges of some elements in the scenes, and the lack of motion blur inherent in stop-motion animation, meant that there was a problem with strobing on some shots; for example, on Victor’s legs when he was running,” reveals Richard Baker.  “We added character motion blur to this type of sequence. There were some similar issues when the camera was moved fast, and on the long panning shots, for which we would track the shot and add camera motion blur. During the final grade, Tim lifted the blacks and lessened the contrast, which also helped considerably with these issues.”  The effect of stereography has on the sense of perception allowed for scenes to be creatively manipulated.   “3D doesn’t have a tendency to miniaturize objects by itself,” states Matt Bristowe.  “It’s about how you control the depth, and with stereo conversion, you have full creative control. We actually used this deliberately in Frankenweenie in the scene with the giant turtle. We intentionally used the depth to miniaturize the smaller characters to emphasize the giant scale of the turtle.”  Baker says, “I was careful to ensure that the 3D enhanced the storyline and the emotions of the film at every step, and was never gimmicky or unnecessary. At PFW, we see depth as another creative storytelling tool; just as the director can use the grade, the edit, and the score to heighten the emotions of the story we can use the depth. At the start of a project, I worked through the film and produced a depth script, detailing how the depth would be used throughout the movie for dramatic effect. In Frankenweenie, the depth is very much tied to the score – a good indicator of dramatic moments in the film. There are no flat sequences in Frankenweenie, but there are shallower scenes that may proceeded key sequences which called for much more depth, such as Victor in the attic, or the windmill sequence at the end of the film. Of course there are stand-out moments which are designed to really use the 3D, such as when the cat jumps out at Victor in the graveyard.”


“The biggest challenge, from a production point of view, was probably transitioning our artists seamlessly from Wrath straight into Frankenweenie,” states Matt Bristowe.  “These shows are so different in terms of creative content, and the approach to the films was also different. I had to help the artists make this leap without falling behind and hindering the progress of the new show. We overcame the challenge by starting the show early in London during a prep-phase, then taking key supervisors and artists out to India as the Indian artists segued off other projects and onto the new show. We also had the Indian supervisor, Jimmy Phillips, come out to London and spend two months with Richard Baker at the start of the project, to ensure that he had a full understanding of what Richard wanted creatively from the start; he was able to take that back to the Mumbai teams. It’s about first hand communication.”  Richard Baker says, “Every scene in every show has its own challenges, but there is no single aspect of Frankenweenie that I would single out. It was an absolute pleasure to work on this movie.  The creative control I was given, and the trust placed in me and the PFW team by Tim and Disney, made this process extremely rewarding and creatively fulfilling.”  Bristowe remarks, “I’m proud of the whole show. I guess from a production point of view, I’m proud that we delivered such a huge number of shots on time and to the satisfaction of Tim and his team.”


When questioned as to how he sees 3D evolving and whether the technology will become as accepted as colour and sound, Richard Baker answers, “In terms of the filmmakers themselves, I believe 3D is already becoming widely accepted and embraced as a creative tool to be used sympathetically with the sound and the grade; this will only continue.  As with visual effects which have developed to the point that they are an integral part of the filmmaking process for many films, 3D is best employed early in the process; when engaged at an early stage as on Frankenweenie, we can collaborate with the director and the filmmaking team to design the shots and ensure that the 3D is in-line with their vision for the film. In terms of the future, the quality of the 3D will keep improving – whether natively captured or converted.”  For Matt Bristowe, the technology requires artistic forethought.   “The key to me is not to let 3D become a process.  You shouldn’t think you can press a button to produce good 3D. It is a creative tool, and there are more and more filmmakers using it as a creative tool. Perhaps this hasn’t come across to the public yet, who see another film in 3D, but there are a gamut of approaches with 3D.   Just as you can elicit different responses and emotions for a particular scene through the colour grading, so you can through the 3D. I think that realization of this will take time – but it will become more obvious as more good 3D movies are released.”


Production stills © Disney.  All rights reserved.  Images courtesy of Disney and Prime Focus World.

Visit the official websites for Frankenweenie and Prime Focus World; be sure to check out Trevor's Tim Burton filmmaker profile, Freakishly Clever.

Many thanks to Richard Baker and Matt Bristowe for taking the time to be interviewed.

Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.

New poster and trailer for Jack the Giant Slayer

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Before he returns to the X-Men universe for the upcoming sequel X-Men: Days of Future Past, director Bryan Singer is set to unleash the fantasy adventure Jack the Giant Slayer, which reteams him with Christopher McQuarrie, the Academy Award-winning screenwriter of The Usual Suspects.

Formerly titled Jack the Giant Killer and based upon the classic fairy tale, the film sees Nicholas Hoult (X-Men: First Class) leading the cast as the young farmer Jack, who leads an expedition to rescue a princess (Eleanor Tomlinson; Alice in Wonderland) kidnapped by evil giants. Also featuring in the cast are Stanley Tucci (Captain America: The First Avenger), Ian McShane (Snow White and the Huntsman), Bill Nighy (Total Recall), John Kassir (Tales from the Crypt), Ewan McGregor (Salmon Fishing in the Yemen) and Eddie Marsan (Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows)

Along with a poster, Warner Bros. has released a brand new trailer for the film, which was originally slated to arrive this summer before being pushed back to next year; take a look here...


Jack the Giant Slayer is scheduled for release on March 1st, 2013 in North America and will arrive here in the UK on March 22nd.

Robert Pattinson glad to reach Twilight twilight

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The Twilight franchise of fictional sparkly vamps and real-life cheating K-Stews has come to an end with the release of the final film in the series, The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2. It drew a healthy £15.85 million over its opening weekend.
"What do you mean you're Team Rupert Sanders?"
A lot of folk are pretty beat up. Mainly the teenage girls that comprise its fanbase. One person who's thankful for the end, however, is the R-Patz himself.

Here's a compilation of interview clips where Robert Pattinson isn't all that sad about the franchise being over:

Giveaway - Win Kevin Bridges The Story Continues on DVD

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Scotland’s finest young comedian, Kevin Bridges follows his best-selling debut DVD The Story So Far… with the release of his second stand-up DVD & Blu-Ray this autumn. Released on Monday 12th November, Kevin Bridges The Story Continues… sees Kevin triumphantly return to the stage in his home city and perform his brand new show to over 10,000 fans at the SECC Arena in Glasgow.

Often cited as the most exciting Scottish comedian since Billy Connolly, Kevin has the precious ability to tell stories everyone can to relate to, all delivered in his uniquely distinctive, unforgettable and hilarious way. To celebrate the release of The Story Continues..., we have three DVD copies to give away. Read on for details of how to enter...

Order Kevin Bridges The Story Continueshere, and win amazing prizes and see the latest comedy clips at www.facebook.com/comedy.

© 2012 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved

Watch a classic Kevin Bridges clip here:


To be in with a chance of winning, firstly make sure you like us on Facebook (or follow us on Twitter)...


...Then complete your details below, using the subject heading "KEVIN". The competition closes at midnight on Saturday, December 1st. UK entrants only please.

 
 By entering this competition you agree to our terms and conditions, which you can read here.

New Man of Steel trailer to debut before The Hobbit

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One of the most anticipated films of 2013 is Zack Snyder’s Superman reboot Man of Steel. We have already been treated to several teaser trailers from the Watchmen director, which featured a downbeat, bearded Clark Kent played by British Actor Henry Cavill (Immortals), and depending on which trailer you’ve watched, you would have heard a voiceover from Jor-El (Russell Crowe; Gladiator) or Jonathan Kent (Kevin Costner; Dances with Wolves).

Releasing trailers that were identical visually but with contrasting voiceovers from the two men who have a huge influence in Clark Kent’s life was an extremely interesting move from Synder and perhaps sheds some light on the possible struggles that lie ahead for the Man of Steel in this upcoming reboot.

Synder told MTV News that fans can expect a brand new trailer that will be showing before Peter Jackson’s new film The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey:

"It's fun. I can't wait for The Hobbit, so it will be fun to see our crazy Man of Steel trailer and then enjoy The Hobbit because that's going to be great. It just feels like a fun Christmas thing to do, drag the whole family out for that action."

The director went on to talk about Michael Shannon’s (Take Shelter, Boardwalk Empire) role as Superman’s arch-enemy General Zod:

"Shannon is great, he has such great enthusiasm and dedication constantly. You can imagine that you could get actors who go, 'Oh right, it's Zod, it's not 100 percent serious,' or [you can play it] slightly with a wink, there is none of that with him. His effort is to make it realized and to understand this character and what he has to go through, so you have that on one side and you have Henry, who basically is Superman, on the other side and that dynamic."

Snyder also spoke about how thankful he was for the hard work that Cavill and Shannon have put into the new film to make the characters are real as possible:

"I was just incredibly fortunate to play with those guys who really were giving all they had to bring a level of commitment to the scenes they have together so that audiences will get an opportunity to really have their heroes taken seriously. As serious as I was taking it, and I don't mean that from a depressing kind of way but from a, 'This is important and fun and needs to be given the respect that it deserves,' from that perspective it was so exciting to watch them drink the Kool-Aid of that concept and go all the way."

So Peter Jackson fans will have an extra treat when The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey is released next month, while Superman fans will have to wait until June 14th, 2013 for the Man of Steel to hit the cinema.

State of the Genre: The Worrying Truth About Warner Bros. & DC Comics

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Martin Deer on the alleged power struggle within Warner Bros., and its impact on the studio's DC Comics superhero movie output...

On November 10th The LA Times reported some rather disconcerting news that things are not well at Warner Bros. Ben Fritz and Meg James report - via some unidentified inside sources - that there is a major power vacuum at Warner Bros. created in the wake of a decision by Time Warner Inc Chief Executive Jeff Bewkes two years ago to create a new position, Office of the President - a position meant to inspire Warner's top dogs: Television Group President Bruce Roseenblum, Home Entertainment Group President Kevin Tsujihara, and the one most important to us film and comic book movie fans, Jeff Robinov, President of the Motion Pictures Group.

Right now these three individuals are competing - viciously - against each other, casting a dark shadow over the once pleasant atmosphere at Burbank.

Ben and Meg report that...

Morale is low and anxiety is high on Warner's Burbank lot. Some insiders describe an atmosphere in which executives are hesitant to extend contracts, staffers are afraid to cross department lines for fear of "taking sides" and potential partners are wary of signing long-term deals without knowing who will be in charge.

During recent contract renewal talks, movie marketing President Sue Kroll is said to have sought additional responsibilities in part because of concern that her boss and longtime ally Robinov might not remain in his post.

Several other key Warner executives have not negotiated new employment contracts — and appear unlikely to do so until the leadership situation is resolved. They include TV studio President Peter Roth, DC Entertainment President Diane Nelson and Toby Emmerich, president of film label New Line Cinema.

That last quote is very important to comic book fans. Diane Nelson President of DC Entertainment - anointed to the position in 2009 upon its formation to develop franchises for Warner Bros.' DC Comics characters - is as yet to sign a new contract given the current situation.

We have all been wondering for a while just what is keeping Warners from developing their DC Comics projects. As Marvel and Disney plow through the cinematic landscape like Mjolnir through an Ice Giant, WB have been extremely quiet with their comic properties - we know that there are Flash and Wonder Woman scripts in the Burbank vault - and they continue to fall behind when DC Entertainment should have been celebrating its third birthday with a bright future slate of movies ahead of it. As it is, we are due Man of Steel next June and that is it. Oh, and Justice League in 2015.

Yes, a studio that is currently going through a tough time with its executives fighting for power, uncertainty over future leadership and a project leader - Diane Nelson - unwilling to commit to the company which is holding back DC properties are going to release a Justice League movie. If alarm bells aren't ringing about this, then you may need a hearing test. I wrote an opinion piece back in August on why I felt Warners should leave Justice League well alone, and I still stand by that, more than ever now.

The future of DC properties is being risked on a cash grab. A cash grab that given the current state of affairs at the company, plus the lack of any real sort of plan for the DC franchises, has the potential - and to me, seems to be shaping up - to be a disaster that will have serious ramifications for all of the DC Universe.

The reason I suspect that Justice League is being pushed ahead without any real plan, and without establishing each individual character in their own solo films first (ala the Marvel way, ala the right way to do it), is that Robinov is vying for the Office of the President position. A Justice League film that rakes in Avengers Assemble numbers would be a great plus in his column.

Of course, pushing through a film without any real sort of plan, just because a small minority of fans are shouting the loudest that "we want this" does not equal a good business model, and will not rake in Avengers numbers.

Justice League, as I stated in my article back in August, also has the potential to derail the Superman reboot. Christopher Nolan has already walked away from the idea that he's open to guiding the Justice League and should Warners push through with the film then his involvement on a Man of Steel sequel will be non-existent, as will David S. Goyer's and Zack Snyder's possibly, and could mean a sequel will not live up to what I hope - and expect - to be getting next June in Man of Steel.

Warner Bros. needs to get its house in order so people like Diane Nelson can get back to focusing on developing a good solid plan for DC on film. At the moment however that looks unlikely, and we should all remain very cautious and concerned about any and all Justice League talk given this situation.

Martin Deer

Michael Gambon and Jude Law to be honoured at the British Independent Film Awards

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It has been announced that Michael Gambon (Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2) and Jude Law (Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows) will be honoured at this year's British Independent Film Awards.

Gambon will receive the Richard Harris Award for his outstanding contribution to British film. He took over Harris' role as Professor Albus Dumbledore in the Harry Potter film series following Harris' death in 2002. Previous recipients of this award, which was introduced 10 years ago, include Ralph Fiennes (Skyfall), John Hurt (Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy), and Helena Bonham Carter (Dark Shadows).

Law will be presented with the Variety Award, for helping to bring international attention to the UK.Previous recipients of this award include Kenneth Branagh (My Week With Marilyn),Helen Mirren (Red), and Michael Caine (The Dark Knight Rises).The British Independent Film Awards ceremony will be held in London on December 9th.

Gambon can next be seen in Dustin Hoffman's Quartet alongside Maggie Smith and Billy Connolly, which is released in the UK on January 4th. Law is currently filming the comedy crime dramaDom Hemingway, and is also starring in Steven Soderbergh's Side Effects with Channing Tatum and Rooney Mara.

The Last Horror Movie sequel in the works

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UK filmmaker Julian Richards (Shiver) has announced that he's developing a sequel to his 2003 cult hit The Last Horror Movie. Entitled Murder on Demand, the found footage follow-up will see the murderous sociopath Max Parry hitting the streets of Los Angeles to continue his serial killing ways and "deliver a quintessentially English view of the value of life in America."

"Max has been living in Los Angeles for several years since the release of Last Horror Movie and has made some interesting observations" said Richards, whose 1997 feature debut Darklands was released in North America this week. "He has also become obsessed with new technology and now uses social networking sites to select victims and mobile phones to track and record his murders, some of which are already available to view on the undernet".

After a successful festival run, The Last Horror Movie was released in the UK by Tartan Video, who subsequently withdrew the film from distribution in 2007 when it was linked to a double murder. It will receive its UK TV premiere on The Horror Channel in January, while there's currently no word on a release date for the sequel.

Freakishly Clever: A Tim Burton Profile (Part 4)

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Trevor Hogg profiles the career of filmmaker Tim Burton in the fourth of a four part feature... read part one, two and three.

Life intersected with art when Tim Burton chose to make a cinematic adaptation of Big Fish by novelist Daniel Wallace; Edward Bloom (Albert Finney) lies on his death bed recounting his youthful adventures to his estranged son William (Billy Crudup). “My father had been ill for a while,” confided the filmmaker, “I tried to get in touch with him, to have, like in this film, some sort of resolution, but it was impossible.” Not all was lost for Burton. “I went back to thinking about my father, and as bad a relationship as I had, early on it was quite magical…It’s important to remember that. I forgot that for too long.” The director added, “I think it’s a thing where everybody loses a parent and, no matter what your relationship is, it’s obviously cause for reflection. I found that even though I wasn’t really close to him, that I still had lots of emotions that were all over the place. And I thought that this film, when I read it, was a good way of visually exploring those feelings, which are complicated and hard to actually put into words.”

Scottish actor Ewan McGregor (Trainspotting), who portrays the young Edward, observed that the story “can connect to all of us because whatever our relationship is or has been with our parents, we can all relate to that. And it's a reparation of a severed relationship. It's hugely moving and it's a beautiful, simple tale.” Playing the elder Sandra K. Bloom (Edward’s wife) is two-time Oscar-winner, Jessica Lange (Blue Sky). “I think in families there is always the mythology,” stated Lange. “It’s interesting because at the end of this film when he says that thing about my father’s stories and his stories lived on after him, that line at the end of the film resonates more than any other in the film because it’s true. I see my kids; my father died when they were quite young, and yet they still tell stories that I told them - his stories - so it’s great. That is how a person lives on, in the stories.” Five-time Academy Award-nominee Albert Finney (The Dresser) could relate to the elder Edward. “My son said to me that he thought that my relationship with my nephew was more open than it was with him. I said, ‘Well, it’s bound to be more complicated with you. You’re my son!’”

It was the work of screenwriter John August (Titan A.E.) which finally convinced the Californian native to produce the picture. “I read the script before I read the book,” remarked Tim Burton. “And I was glad that I did because I think it was a case of where John [August], the writer, actually helped focus the material.”

Big Fish Tim BurtonOutside of a week of principle photography in Paris, France, the movie was shot in the American Southern state of Alabama. “It was a film with a fairly quick schedule,” said the director, “we were shooting very quickly, so we had to move to sometimes three locations in a day.” The really tricky part for Burton was in the casting of the older and younger versions of Edward and Sandra Bloom. “It was an interesting case, because in the case of Albert [Finney], Ewan [McGregor], Alison [Lohman], and Jessica [Lange], you couldn’t quite think of just one person; you had to think in tandem.”

A significant judgment call for the filmmaker was how to handle the distinct local dialect. “I remember liking To Kill a Mockingbird [1962] and feeling like, well there is a lyrical aspect to the language. And so we tried to go for what was more of a poetic cadence, and little bit less of the ‘Come on…tell-you-a-story-on-the-porch-with-a-mint-julep’ type of thing that I always equate to it.” Asked about the difficulty in replacing his Scottish accent with a Southern drawl, Ewan McGregor answered, “For me, as a Scot, it's a much easier accent to do than a standard American accent because you can really hear it.” Burton was impressed by McGregor’s cinematic performance, “Everybody had a particularly tricky job, and his [Ewan] was to play a sort of romanticized version of a character while still keeping it a human being.”

As irony would have it while filming the story, fatherhood arrived for Burton; British actress Helena Bonham Carter (A Room with a View), who also stars in the picture, was pregnant with their first child. Other members of the cast included, Marion Cotillard (La vie en rose), Danny DeVito (Get Shorty), Steve Buscemi (Fargo), Robert Guillaume (Lean on Me), Miley Cyrus (The Last Song), and Loudon Wainwright III (The Slugger’s Wife). Released in 2003, Big Fish caused film critic Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly to write, “It’s like Forrest Gump [1994] without the bogus theme-park politics.” Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times was once again not impressed; he wrote, “there is no denying that Will has a point: The old man is a blowhard. There is a point at which his stories stop working as entertainment and segue into sadism.”

For his work on the picture, which grossed $122 million worldwide, Danny Elfman received an Oscar nomination for Best Original Musical Score. Big Fish was also lauded at the Golden Globes with nominations for Best Picture – Musical or Comedy, Best Supporting Actor (Finney), Best Original Score, and Best Original Song. And at the BATFTAs, the movie was nominated for Best Film, Best Direction, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Supporting Actor (Finney), Best Production Design, Best Visual Effects, and Best Makeup & Hair.

“The project had been floating around for a while and the studio offered it to me,” said Tim Burton on how he came to make his 2005 big screen adaptation of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory written by children author Roald Dahl. “I remembered the story. It was, in a way, my story: misfit boy has a dream, sticks with it, and gets lucky.” Charlie Bucket (Freddie Highmore), along with a group of other children, wins a tour of a wondrous chocolate factory owned by the unconventional candy-maker Willy Wonka (Johnny Depp). “He [Dahl] was like an adult writer for children,” observed the American moviemaker of the famous originator of the story. “It's the kind of book you could read at any age and get something out of it. He was clever at being both specific and kind of subversive and off-kilter and kind of leaving you guessing a little bit, and we did try to keep that feeling.”

“We just felt that if you have an eccentric character, it's fine in the book,” explained Burton about the decision to create a back story for Willy Wonka, “but it just felt for the movie that if you've got a guy that's acting that strange, you kind of want to get a flavor of why he's the way he is; otherwise he's just a weirdo.” To portray the pivotal role, Johnny Depp (Pirates of the Caribbean) sought inspiration from television. “I had these memories of children's show hosts, guys like Captain Kangaroo and Mr. Roger's Neighborhood, and local guys like Uncle Al and Mr. Green Jeans,” began Depp. “Even then, how odd it was, the way they spoke with this bizarre musical rhythm cadence in their speech pattern. Also I was thinking about game show hosts and that perpetual grimace/grin on their face. I kept thinking they're certainly not like that at home. You feel like they go on stage, put a mask on, and do their thing and take it off. It's almost like a clown. So those two things, as well as the fact that there's such dark and light in that story and such a subversive kind of undertone and a twisted/perverted side to the character, became the basis for this version of Wonka. Tim and John August, who wrote the screenplay, were great about it.” Burton added, “I think he just comes across as really emotionally repressed and stunted. When people get traumatized they just sort of shut down. Also related to that, I've met people that are kind of geniuses in one area but are completely deficient in every other area of their life.” As for Depp referencing a certain celebrity musician as a character role model, Burton responded, “Here's the deal. There's a big difference: Michael Jackson likes children, Willy Wonka can’t stand them. To me that's a huge difference in the whole persona thing.“

Looming over the project was the 1971 film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory with Gene Wilder (Young Frankenstein). “I think he's great,” said the director of Wilder’s performance as Wonka. “None of us on the production were either trying to top that or look at that. Our goal, except for the little bit of back story, was to try to be a little bit more true to the spirit of the book. Instead of having the golden goose and an egg, have the squirrels and the nut room.” Rather than have the furry creatures computer generated, Burton went with the live-action approach. “The squirrel-trainers, man – they went nuts! It was like a special James Bond training camp. As the months went on, you could just see those guys glaze over; they had a weird look in their eyes. But it was important. I remember a squirrel jumped on me and it’s the freakiest feeling. They’re like these hyper-rats that jump, so it gives it a reality to actually experience that a little as opposed to the scene being all just an effect.” Tim Burton disagreed with the notion that the movie is too dark for children. “I go back and I look at the book and I look at the original thing and we're probably even lighter in a certain way. When you read it in the book it almost seems more traumatic and horrible, and yet this is a children's classic. I think adults forget sometimes what it's like to be a kid. That's why I like the book and that's why I think it remains a classic. You kind of explore those edgier aspects of childhood.”

“I enjoy playing someone with slightly twisted social skills,” chuckled Johnny Depp. One thing that had the actor wondering was the reaction of his own children. “I was so scared when they were going to see Charlie, way more than the idea of being reviewed by a movie critic. I was so in fear that my kids were going to not react well to the film. So I was sitting at home waiting for them and they arrived back and my son of three years old, Jack, walks in and looks up at me and quoted Wonka. He went, 'You're really weird.' [Laughs] I felt suddenly liberated.”

Cumulating film critics responses to the picture, movie review website Rotten Tomatoes concluded, “Closer to the source material than 1971’s Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is for people who like their Chocolate visually appealing and dark.” Judging by the worldwide box office receipts, which amounted to $475 million for the $150 million production, Tim Burton was able to hit the sweet spot for audience members. At the Oscars the film was nominated for Best Costume Design; while at the BAFTAs it received nominations for Best Visual Effects, Best Costume Design, Best Makeup & Hair, and Best Production Design. In recognition of his portrayal of Willie Wonka, Johnny Depp was up for the Golden Globe for Best Actor – Musical or Comedy.

While the film production was taking place on Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Tim Burton and Depp were simultaneously working on the stop-motion animation picture Corpse Bride (2005). The filmmaker was able to take advantage of the situation, “It worked well because you could only work with the kids so much during the day,” stated the director. “We'd work the day and then go over to the sound-booth and do some voice work on [Corpse Bride]. It was kind of a chaotic situation, but it worked.” Burton had nothing but admiration for his leading man, “He was Willy Wonka by day and Victor [Van Dort] by night, so it might have been a little schizophrenic for him; but he’s great. It's the first animated movie he's done and he's always into a challenge.” Johnny Depp recalled the first time he stepped behind the microphone to tape his lines, “The great luxury was that when I arrived that night to do the recording for the session, [the] Victor [puppet] was standing there and so I got to meet the puppets. They were beautiful. Beautiful. Really inspiring.”

While out walking in the woods a timid groom (Johnny Depp) rehearses his wedding vows only to find himself inadvertently proposing to the revived corpse of a jilted bride (Helena Bonham Carter). “It’s basically a love story, an emotional story [with] humor,” said Tim Burton of the Victorian era tale loosely based on Russian-Jewish folklore. “And like any kind of fable or fairy tale, there may be elements that are somewhat unsettling. But that's part of the history of those kinds of stories.” Depp could relate to his animated persona, “He's a character that's not so far away from other characters that I've played in the past for Tim, like Edward Scissorhands or a little bit of an outsider - a bumbling, deeply insecure nervous character, a lot like me in life.” The actor went on to say, “Working with Tim is really like going home for me. It's this place that's very comfortable even with the knowledge that there's a lot of risks that have to be taken and you have to really be prepared to explore. But there is great comfort there.”

Acknowledging that he frequently collaborates with Depp and his wife Helena Bonham Carter (she plays the title character), Burton remarked, “I wouldn't cast Johnny or anybody that I love working with just to have them in the movie. You always want it to be the right thing, the right role.” Other performers who appear in the picture are Emily Watson (Breaking the Waves), Tracey Ullman (Bullets Over Broadway), Albert Finney, Richard E. Grant (Gosford Park), Christopher Lee (The Golden Compass), Michael Gough (The Go-Between), Deep Roy (Star Trek), Danny Elfman (The Kingdom), and Lisa Kay (Room to Rent).

As with actor Vincent Price (House of Wax), Tim Burton took the opportunity to meet another of his childhood movie idols. “Johnny [Depp], Helena [Bonham Carter] and I went to his [Ray Harryhausen] house in London,” recollected the director. “We met him for the first time and he is just such an amazing man and so generous with his time and his enthusiasm and all. Then he went to the set of Corpse Bride and production kind of ground to a halt that day cause everyone was like, ‘Uhhh…’ I think he not only inspired stop motion animators but any animator.”

Contemplating why he approaches the topic of death with a sense of humour, Burton said, “I’d rather go later than sooner, but I think a lot of it has to do with the culture I grew up in – death was very taboo, very dark and not to be discussed. But living in Southern California, I was also near the Hispanic community for whom death was a day-to-day celebration. It made it feel like, ‘Yeah, you know, it’s a part of life; it’s going to happen to everybody…’ I was always impressed by the way other cultures treated it with a sense of fun. It just seemed more accurate and more right to me.”

Corpse Bride was nominated for Best Animated Picture at the Oscars and quadrupled its $40 million production budget at the box office by earning $117 million worldwide.

2005 saw the release of Cinema16: American Short Films on video; the retrospective included Vincent (1982) by Tim Burton. Two years later another project of long-standing interest to the California native would be resurrected.

Explaining the origins of Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007), legendary music composer Stephen Sondheim (Dick Tracy) stated, “This movie is an homage to Bernard Herrmann; when I was fifteen years old I saw a movie called Hanover Square [1945], for which he wrote the music. It was a melodrama, took place in Edwardian England and it was about a composer and featured a piano concerto - that the composer supposedly had written. And I’ve always wanted to write a - I don’t want to say a horror musical, I don’t really mean that - but a musical melodrama in which the music would maintain the tension.” Good fortune smiled upon Sondheim. “It just happened that I was in London and saw at Stratford East a production of this new version of Sweeney Todd, written by a young playwright named Christopher Bond and I was so taken with it.”

The scored stage version of the cannibalistic tale about a Victorian era barber obtaining his revenge by turning those whom wronged him into meat pies first appeared in 1979. “It was a big flop in London,” stated Steven Sondheim about the initial public reaction to the Tony Award-winning theatre production. “London critics hated it, which was ironic because it was sort of a love - my love letter to England and I really felt like a rejected lover.”

Making the transition from the theatre playhouse to the movie cinema required some revisions to the tale. “I wanted the story to be told and I wanted it to go swiftly,” said Sondheim. “That meant that we had to excise certain parts of the songs and excise certain songs.” Burton found that the revisions had gone too far, “When I first read the script there was less music in it so we put more music into it. When you listen to the soundtrack you get the story by the music. Keep it musical. I thought it was a real plus and a real strength of the piece."

Tim Burton was taken back when he was given the approval to proceed with the project, “It was an amazing thing, you go to the studio and say you’re going to do an R rated musical with lots of blood and no professional singers, and it’s about a serial killer and cannibalism and they go “great!” That was unheard of, I’ve never had that happen in my life before! That gave me hope that there are still people in Hollywood who are willing to try different things.”

Johnny Depp did not have to audition his singing abilities to Stephen Sondheim. "Meeting him and the fact that he’d had a musical background,” began Sondheim, “he came from a rock band even though he was not a lead singer, I knew he was musical just from that. And I also knew that he was intelligent enough from talking to him; he would not allow himself to play this part unless he thought he could handle it vocally.” The next creative challenge for Depp was his dramatic portrayal of the falsely charged barber Benjamin Baker, who transforms into the psychotic serial killer Sweeney Todd. “Tim and I sat down and talked about what this guy was going to look like,” remarked the actor. “We knew that it was a pretty special opportunity, once-in-a-lifetime kind of thing – horror slash musical.” Burton clarified the comment of his leading man by deadpanning, “The Sound of Music [1965] with blood.”

“We always saw him as emotional,” stated the director on how he and Depp viewed the title character. “That’s what Johnny brought to it. When Peter Lorre [Casablanca] looks at you, you just see all sorts of things that are going through the guy’s head, both positive and negative. But even for a monster there is a humanity that comes through. It’s very interiorized, which was very interesting to try and do. That was the goal to mix all things together.” As with his other cinematic roles Johnny Depp stated he had a series of role models for Sweeney Todd including Lon Chaney Sr. (The Wolf Man), Boris Karloff (Frankenstein), Peter Lorre, and musician Iggy Pop.

Other actors featured in the $50 million musical production are Helena Bonham Carter, Alan Rickman (Truly Madly Deeply), Timothy Spall (The Damned United), and Sacha Baron Cohen (Borat). Grossing $153 million worldwide, the picture won the admiration of Richard Corliss of Time, who wrote, “Burton and Depp infuse the brilliant cold steel of Stephen Sondheim’s score with a burning passion. Helena Bonham Carter and a superb supporting cast bring focus to this musical nightmare. It’s bloody great.” Kirk Honeycutt of The Hollywood Reporter observed in his review, “The blood juxtaposed to the music is highly unsettling. It runs contrary to expectations. Burton pushes this gore into his audience’s faces so as to feel the madness and the destructive fury of Sweeney’s obsession.”

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street received Academy Award nominations for Best Actor (Depp) and Best Costume Design, and won the Oscar for Best Art Direction. The picture was up for BAFTA nominations including Best Costume Design and Best Makeup & Hair; while at the Golden Globes it was a candidate for Best Picture – Musical or Comedy and Best Actor – Musical or Comedy (Depp) along with nominations for Best Director and Best Actress – Musical or Comedy (Bonham Carter).

With over two decades worth of Hollywood directing experience, Tim Burton took on a different role when he saw the Oscar-nominated animated short film 9 (2005) by Shane Acker. “When I first saw the short, I felt really close to Shane's design sensibility and the kind of characters he had. The short felt like a piece of a larger picture, and I felt I could offer him an environment, some support, so he could just concentrate on making his film.” In figuring out how to best be a mentor, the filmmaker looked into his own past experiences, “I tried to treat it as, ‘What do I want when I'm on a movie? What's helpful to me?’ So I suggested a screenwriter [Pamela Pettler] I had worked with, whom I thought would be a good fit, and people like Danny [Elfman]. Also, as an animator, you get tunnel vision, and Shane had this in his mind for so long, that it's good to have people who can step back and look at the big picture, and that's what we tried to do. Shane's enough of an artist that he's not feeling insecure, so there's no “my idea" versus "your idea."”

To expand the story about a rag-doll who wakes up in a post-Apocalyptic world into a full length feature picture, the physical puppets were replaced with digital replicas. “He is a big fan of stop motion,” said Burton of his protégé Acker. “A lot of his inspirations come from that world, and that’s what I love about it, too, because in the animation and in the actor’s performances, it’s got a naturalness to it, which I found very different than most animated films. You get a lot of times where people try to push the voices broader. But in the performances and in the animation, he really went for that kind of stop motion grounded reality that I love as well, and he made the right choice, because with the budget he had and then with the kind of camera moves and the action that he wanted, I think he got the best of both worlds.”

“I saw this amazing Academy Award-winning film called Balance [1989] by the Lauenstein brothers back in the Eighties,” remarked Shane Acker. “And all the characters are identical puppets, but they have different numbers on their backs. And what's amazing is, through the course of the film these different personalities emerge from the identical puppets. From an economical standpoint it's really smart, because you just make a couple of puppets and change the numbers. Once I started getting into that world, I thought we really need to separate these characters more, so that whole design idea went out the window. The loose idea is that the puppets are versions, so as they increase the characters get more and more refined. Let's say 10 is the perfect doll, the closest we can get to perfection as humans is 9 because we're all flawed in some way.”

9 (2009) stars vocal performances from Elijah Wood (Forever Young), John C. Reilly (Chicago), Jennifer Connelly (A Beautiful Mind), Christopher Plummer (The Last Station), Crispin Glover (Back to the Future), Martin Landau (Ed Wood), and Fred Tatasciore (Foolish); the movie earned $42 million worldwide surpassing its $30 million production budget. At the Annie Awards the picture was nominated for Best Animated Effects and Best Production Design.

At the end of November 2009, the Museum of Modern Art in New York mounted an exhibit of the sketches, paintings, storyboards, props, cartoons, and puppets created by Tim Burton. “I don’t really go through things very much, so it was interesting for me to go back through it all,” remarked the director. “It helps ground you and gets you to remember what interested you to begin with. It’s you, but a different you. You can look at yourself objectively.” Burton added, “The whole sketching and drawing process to me is the equivalent to how some people write notes. I’ve never really felt like a writer. It was always a visual thing for me. With Jack Skellington, for example, that was just a doodle I kept drawing over and over and over for no apparent reason.” As to what he thinks of the idea of the public exhibition, the filmmaker stated, “It’s such a strange and surreal event to me. I haven’t quite grasped it. I might as well put my dirty laundry basket in there as well.”

“The reason Alice in Wonderland isn’t as daunting as past productions,” stated Tim Burton of his 2010 adaptation of the famous tale by Lewis Carroll, “is that every version I ever saw of Alice in Wonderland was of a girl walking around passively with a bunch of weird characters. It never really had any feeling or grounding to it. It felt like a new challenge to me. There isn’t a great version that I have to live up to.” As for his reasoning for making use of the next big thing in Hollywood, the directed remarked, “3-D just seems to really lend itself to the Alice story. The thing about Alice for me was not so much the literalness of the story, but the trippy nature of it and still trying to make that compelling.” However, Burton did not completely immerse himself in the technology, “I didn't want to do the mo-cap [motion-capture] thing because I'm not personally so much into that. I just went more with the pure animation and then live-action, and tried to warp the live-action, so that it would fit into the world.”

“I wouldn't call it a sequel because there are so many stories in Alice in Wonderland,” remarked the moviemaker. “The goal was to take the randomness of the book and make it its own story. A lot of it is based on the Jabberwocky poem in one of the stories. That's not a big part of the story, but we're just using elements of all of the books because that's the nature of the material. They don't really follow a specific, linear structure.”

“It's about finding the narrative and finding the themes and trying to knit things together and form continuity,” explained music composer Danny Elfman on how he scored the picture. “The decision-making process is about who gets a theme and who doesn't. You can't just give every character a theme. It just starts getting too crazy.” Elfman carried on to say, “The challenge is to be inventive…to add energy and motion and anticipation and a sense of something building.” As to why he continues to work with Burton, Danny Elfman remarked, “The joy of working with Tim is and always has been his unpredictability. I never know how he is going to react to something. People say, ‘Oh, you've worked with him so long, you must know when you write something that he will love it.’ It's quite the contrary. I've never found the secret, magic key.”

“Whether it's Alice or The Wizard of Oz [1939] or any of these classic stories, they're always exploring what's in a person's inner psyche,” observed the director. “You see Alice -- Mia Wasikowska -- is intelligent. She's got an internal life because all of these things are symbolic for working out whatever psychological problems you have. That whole question of fantasy versus reality -- most fantasy speaks to reality. It speaks to something real in somebody's life. That's why those old stories told around campfires were told, because they connect to real emotion. It's not just a story about Goat Boy and Lizard Man.”

"I was at dance school doing about thirty-five hours of practice a week until I was fourteen,” explained Mia Wasikowska (The Kids Are All Right). “Then ballet started to grate – the whole idea of trying to attain perfection started to ruin the experience, so I decided to try another type of performance." The Australian actress found herself entering a strange new world where she had to speak her lines to sticky tape or a tennis ball or cardboard cutout. “I was basically planted in this sea of green. I really had to use my imagination." On how she viewed the main character of Alice Kingsley, Wasikowska said, “She’s grown up a lot and is somewhat of a different person, and she’s going back to her roots and discovering herself"

“I like to work with actors who bring something to it,” revealed Tim Burton. “If there was a Lewis Carroll line or something from the book that wasn't in the script and they wanted it to be in the script, they would tell me. There was a lot of that. If an actor connects with something and feels passionate about it, it's always nice. You usually get something better from them because it's something meaningful that they can grasp onto.” Populating the fantasy world of Wonderland are Burton regulars Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter, as well as newcomers Michael Sheen (The Queen) and Anne Hathaway (Rachel Getting Married).

Michael Sheen voices McTwisp, The White Rabbit which lures Alice back to Wonderland, “He’s a warm character but, at the same time, he can be quite fussy and quite strict with Alice as well,” said Sheen. “He has an edge to him, a nervous energy, always feeling like he’s behind time; time is very important to him. But he’s quite brave when called upon.” The British actor marveled, “One of the things I love about the film most is that the animals really do look like animals. They’re not humanized, in any way. When a horse suddenly turns around to the Knave of Hearts and says something disparaging about dogs, you really don’t expect it. It’s really effective.” There were some perks for being part of the cast. “My daughter is still living off the fact that I’m in New Moon [2009]. Now that I’m in Alice in Wonderland as well, it’s just gone stratospheric. At school, I’m treated like royalty now. But, everyone is convinced that I have red eyes because that’s two characters now with them.”

Playing the part of the White Queen is Anne Hathaway. “One of the most fun parts about my character was this freedom that Tim gave me from the first conversation we had,” remarked Hathaway. “He said, ‘In Wonderland, I don’t want anything to be all good or all bad, so I don’t want it to be that the Red Queen [Helena Bonham Carter] is the bad one and you’re like the nice benevolent one who’s all good.’ He said, ‘Have fun exploring the relationship between the two of them. They come from the same place.’ I thought, oh how fun if my character has a sort of hidden psychosis.”

Along with the White Queen, Alice has another ally in the form of The Mad Hatter, portrayed by Johnny Depp. “I think he’s so brave and smart with his choices,” declared Mia Wasikowska when talking about her co-star. “He can play a crazy character but still give it a core humanity which I think people can identify with.” To play the part, Johnny Depp returned to the source matterial. “The book is the basis for everything. There are little mysteries, little clues in the book that I found fascinating, that were keys to at least my understanding of the Mad Hatter.” Explaining the relationship between the two film personas, Wasikowska remarked, “They’re on the same side. They have an understanding about each other. They both feel like outsiders and feel alone in their separate worlds, and have a special bond and friendship.”

“I had a weird connection [to the tale] because I live and work out of the studio of the illustrator, Arthur Rackham,” revealed Tim Burton. “In 1905, he did some amazing versions of Alice in Wonderland and Sleepy Hollow that I've been involved with.” Performer Michael Sheen found himself drawn to the themes addressed by Lewis Carroll, “For me, the allure of the story is that we all live in this illusion that we’re civilized and that everything makes sense and everything has a place, and Alice in Wonderland shows you that actually it’s a very thin film between sanity and insanity, and total wildness, chaos and fear. Somehow, that seems to be the most true expression of what it’s like to be a child, where things are both familiar and strange, at the same time, and when you think you know what something is, it suddenly shifts and becomes something else.”

A real life drama unfolded beyond the film set of the $200 million production when Disney decided to cut the time period between the theatrical and DVD release of Alice in Wonderland from seventeen to twelve weeks. Cinema owners balked at the idea and threatened not to screen the picture; however, a settlement was reached allowing the movie to gross $210 million within its first three days of being released worldwide.

Following in the footsteps of its predecessors, the picture has generated mixed reactions from film critics. Todd McCarthy of Variety wrote, “Alice in Wonderland has its moments of delight, humour and bedazzlement. But it also becomes more ordinary as it goes along, building to a generic battle climax similar to any number of others in CGI-heavy movies of the past few years.” McCarthy’s colleague Michael Rechtshaffen from The Hollywood Reporter was of a different opinion, “Although Carroll purists might pooh-pooh some of the script’s more radical alterations, like bringing Alice up to legal age, the shift helps hit home the film’s welcome message of female empowerment. Ultimately, it’s the visual landscape that makes Alice’s newest adventure so wondrous, as technology has finally been able to catch up with Burton’s endlessly fertile imagination.”

Three productions on Tim Burton’s cinematic agenda are a black and white stop-motion animation version of Frankenweenie (2011); Maleficent, a retelling of Sleeping Beauty (1959) from the villainess fairy godmother’s point-of-view; and an adaptation of a 1960s gothic television series about a newly-hired governess who searches for her origins while working for a wealthy family shrouded in mystery. “Dark Shadows is happening,” enthused Johnny Depp who is cast to play the pivotal role of a two hundred year old vampire. “It’s like a lifelong dream for me. I loved the show when I was a kid. I was obsessed with Barnabas Collins. I have photographs of me holding Barnabas Collins posters when I was five or six. I’m very excited to do it.”

Responding to the persistent criticism that he values style over substance, Tim Burton remarked, “People don’t realize, because of the surface way the films look and the cartoonish nature of them, that the only thing that keeps me going through a movie is that these characters mean something to me.” However, the director did admit, “If I were to hone myself, it would be: how could I make images feel a certain way, so that what you’re looking at is the thing.” When asked what he looks for in a story, the filmmaker replied, “I always appreciate movies and things that have everything, because that’s the way I feel about life. There’s nothing that’s just funny, just dramatic or just scary. It’s all mixed together.”

A self-described “happy-go-lucky manic depressive”, Burton experienced a revelation while returning to his hometown of Burbank, California. “I remember going to my ten year high school reunion, and when I looked around the room it was obvious that the people who’d done the most with their lives were the ones who’d been troubled in school. People who were satisfied with themselves in high school and thought they had it all, stopped growing. Going to that reunion was a shock. The one good thing about having that kind of childhood is that it gives you time on your own. Because you’re not popular you’re not out socially, so you’ve got time to think and to be quietly angry and emotional. And if you’re lucky, you’ll develop a creative outlet to exorcise those feelings.”

Read the screenplay for Alice in Wonderland and be sure to check out Lenny's Alice in Wonderland site and the Alice in Wonderland Movie fansite.

For more on Tim Burton, visit his
official website or fan-site The Tim Burton Collective.

Blood Relations: The Making of Dark Shadows
Digging Up the Past: Frankenweenie Recreated in 3D

Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
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