The King of the World returns...
Cameron to follow 'Titanic' with 3D 'Avatar'
By Anne Thompson
Jan 9, 2007
James Cameron is set to direct "Avatar," his first dramatic feature since his Oscar-winning blockbuster "Titanic" in 1997, it was announced Monday by Fox Filmed Entertainment chairmen Jim Gianopulos and Tom Rothman. Cameron will start principal photography on "Avatar" in April for a summer 2009 release.
Cameron has already spent years in research and development on the multiple processes needed to create this $200 million hybrid of live action and animation, and has already shot 10 to 11 minutes of footage. "I've been the busiest unemployed director in Hollywood," he said. "We think we're going to blow people away. We want to throw you to the back wall of the theater. My goal is to rekindle those crazy mystical moments my generation felt when we first saw '2001: A Space Odyssey,' or the next generation's 'Star Wars.' It took me 10 years to find something hard enough."
Partly through its work on six documentary features, Cameron's Lightstorm Entertainment team has researched a groundbreaking mix of live-action cinematography and virtual photorealistic production techniques for "Avatar," which will feature virtual characters filmed for 3D release in a new digital 3D format.
Cameron has been lobbying for exhibitors around the country to adopt more digital projection systems. About 300-400 are in place now, he estimated, and he expects some 1,000 by year's end. He anticipates that 1,500 -2,000 digital 3D theaters will exist by the film's 2009 release. Cameron said he likes Real D cinema system that has been used for films like "Chicken Little" and "Monster House," but is open to any system that can play the film.
"Avatar" will mark a return for Cameron to the sci-fi action adventure genre. Written by Cameron, who first wrote an 80-page treatment 11 years ago, "Avatar" is the story of a wounded ex-marine who is unwillingly sent to settle and exploit the faraway planet Pandora. He gets caught up in battle for survival by the planet's inhabitants, called Na'vis, and falls in love with one of them.
Cameron had been developing another project, "Battle Angel Alita," but when that script didn't come together after many drafts, he went into his script drawer and dusted off "Avatar" for the first time in five years. He started designing the movie back in May 2005, he said.
Cameron will continue to develop "Battle Angel" as a possible "Project 880," the title he uses as a cover for upcoming projects.
For "Avatar," Cameron will use image-based performance capture techniques similar to those used by such films as "Superman Returns" and "King Kong," and a real-time virtual camera system, which will blend dramatic performances and CG.
For the film's lead role, Jack Sully, Cameron sought a new face. After global screen tests, he selected Australian actor Sam Worthington, who has starred in "Somersault" and "Dirty Deeds." "He's a tough guy, a young Russell Crowe," Cameron said. "They grow them differently over there."
Zoe Saldana ("The Terminal," "Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl") will portray the local alien woman with whom Jake gets involved. She will be a CG character, while Sully will exist in both human and CG or "avatar" form. Both actors have signed on for possible future installments as well, because Cameron and Fox see "Avatar" as a potential franchise. Other casting will be announced shortly.
The highly competitive race for the assignment to supervise the film's visual effects went to Peter Jackson's Oscar-winning visual effects house Weta Digital ("The Lord of the Rings" trilogy). "Joe Lettieri and his team have a passion for fantasy filmmaking," Cameron said. "And they met us half-way on the price."
"Avatar" will be produced by Cameron and Jon Landau for Cameron's Lightstorm Entertainment. Principal photography -- scheduled to last only 31 days-- will take place in and around Los Angeles, and in New Zealand. Live action will be shot using the proprietary Fusion digital 3D camera system developed by Cameron and Vince Pace.
Cameron and Fox first joined forces in 1985 for the sc-fi classic "Aliens." Next came "The Abyss," which revolutionized visual effects technology; and "True Lies," starring Arnold Schwarzenegger. In 1996, Fox greenlighted Cameron's "Titanic," which became the biggest blockbuster of all time, earning $1.8 billion worldwide, and winning eleven Academy Awards, including best picture.
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Director Cameron to shoot again
"Titanic" auteur commits to long-planned "Avatar" project.
By John Horn, Times Staff Writer
2:20 PM PST, January 8, 2007
Nearly 10 years after Jim Cameron made "Titanic" the record-breaking filmmaker said Monday he's finally ready to step behind the cameras again.
Cameron's "Avatar," a science-fiction adventure tale set 150 years in the future, will start production this spring, with a scheduled summer 2009 release by 20th Century Fox. For now, Cameron's other contemplated feature, "Battle Angel," is on hold.
Cameron actually outlined "Avatar" before he made "Titanic," but didn't have the filmmaking tools to make it. "It was just too ambitious," Cameron said. "But now the technology has caught up."
After flip-flopping between "Avatar" and "Battle Queen," Cameron said he made his decision to proceed with the former film after completing a five-day camera test a year ago. "I could vividly picture how we would shoot the film," the writer-director said.
The movie, which combines live action and animation, will be made with some of the same performance-capture animation techniques used in movies such as "Monster House" and "The Polar Express." Cameron says his process will offer numerous refinements, especially in its depiction of facial expressions and physical action. The movie will be filmed with digital cameras and shown in 3-D theaters.
"The fundamental difference between the way we're doing [performance capture] and the way it's been done is that it's really director-centric now," Cameron said. Rather than wait for months of post-production to see how a final shot turns out, Cameron will be able to see in nearly real time how an actor and the environment combine.
Since he made 1997's "Titanic," the highest-grossing movie in Hollywood history and the winner of the best picture Oscar, Cameron has made several documentaries. In both "Ghosts of the Abyss" and "Aliens of the Deep," Cameron experimented with new 3-D camera systems, new versions of which will be employed on "Avatar."
Cameron said 95% of the film unfolds on Pandora, a moon of a giant gas planet. Pandora features a lush tropical forest rich in striking plant and animal species, and its inhabitants have been targeted for exploitation.
While much of the acting will be recorded in 31 days of performance-capture photography on a high-tech Playa Vista stage, "Avatar" also will feature live-action, which will be cut together with the animation. "Ideally, the audience won't know where one ends and the next starts," Cameron said.
When Cameron made "Titanic," he cast at its center two actors without much name recognition at the time - Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet. Both, of course, went on to be huge stars.
For "Avatar," Cameron has cast two more under-the-radar performers: 30-year-old Aussie actor Sam Worthington ("The Great Raid," "Hart's War") will play the film's hero, Jake, and 28-year-old Zoe Saldana ("Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl," "Drumline") as his love interest
New York Times piece...
‘Titanic' Director Joins Fox on $200 Million Film
By SHARON WAXMAN
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 8 — James Cameron, the director whose “Titanicâ€