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Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 12:42 am
by moviscop
Cold Bishop wrote:Honestly, Herzog never ceases to amaze
If anyone has IMDb pro, there should be more information regarding this project. it looks very strange and interesting.
Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 4:42 pm
by chaddoli
I do and there isn't really anything else known.
My Son, My Son (2010) USA
IN DEVELOPMENT*
Status: Script
Contact: Absurda
Los Angeles, CA
Los Angeles, CA
Production Co: Absurda
Genre: Drama / Horror /
Source Material: True Story
Filmmakers:
Directed by
Werner Herzog
Writers
Herbert Golder Screenplay
Werner Herzog Screenplay
Producers
Eric Bassett ... producer
David Lynch ... executive producer
Production Companies
Absurda
Other Companies
Absurda ... international sales
*IN DEVELOPMENT
The status was last updated on 15 May 2008.
Since this project is categorized as being in development, the data is subject to change or could be removed completely.
Posted: Wed Jul 16, 2008 11:02 pm
by Antoine Doinel
School of Rock 2: America Rocks
Wong Kar-Wai has his
next project lined up.
Diablo Cody
to pen Spielberg comedy idea.
Posted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 3:21 am
by exte
chaddoli wrote:I do and there isn't really anything else known.
Off topic, but is IMDb Pro worth it? Is it like Hollywood Reporter and Variety combined or something? Do they have a lot of agreements with all these publications for an online thing at IMDb?
Posted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 3:45 am
by Antoine Doinel
IMDB Pro is worth it if you're working in the industry. From what I recall, I believe you gain access to reams of contact info that you can't get from regular access, as well as more info in projects that are in very early stages of development.
Posted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 3:54 pm
by exte
Thanks Antoine...
Posted: Sat Jul 19, 2008 7:21 am
by moviscop
Friday the 13th Remake
Ft13 Blog
First Still
Big thanks to Michael Bay for bringing this little gem to us.
Posted: Thu Jul 24, 2008 11:40 pm
by Dylan
Tim Burton is making his version of
Alice in Wonderland.
From the Hollywood Reporter:
Australian actress Mia Wasikowska is in final negotiations to walk through the looking glass in Burton's take on Lewis Carroll's classic fantasy novel "Alice in Wonderland." The deal marks the end of a long search for the big-budget project's title character.
The film, based on a script by Linda Woolverton ("The Lion King"), will be produced by longtime Burton collaborator Richard Zanuck, former Disney chairman Joe Roth and Jennifer and Suzanne Todd. It will be shot with live-action and performance-capture footage and presented in Disney Digital 3-D. Disney creative executive Jason Reed will oversee the project, set to begin principal photography in November.
Wasikowska got her start on the Aussie series "All Saints" and is a regular on HBO's "In Treatment." She next will appear opposite Daniel Craig in Ed Zwick's war drama "Defiance" and just completed filming the role of a young Amelia Earhart fan in Mira Nair's biopic "Amelia," starring Hilary Swank.
Wasikowska is repped by Endeavor and RGM Associates.
The tentative release date is March 2010.
Meanwhile, I'm assuming the
Believe it or Not project is either on hold or has another director attatched.
Posted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 3:21 am
by Cosmic Bus
Aronofsky is
officially helming a fourth Robocop film, and a
Tron sequel is unveiled, with Jeff Bridges and architect-turned-commercial-director
Joseph Kosinski in tow.
Posted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 8:38 am
by moviscop
Cosmic Bus wrote:Aronofsky is
officially helming a fourth Robocop film, and a
Tron sequel is unveiled[/url] in tow.
I will keep my fingers crossed, I still have hope in Aronofsky.
Posted: Sat Jul 26, 2008 1:48 am
by Jeff
Dylan wrote:Tim Burton is making his version of Alice in Wonderland.
Is there even a remote chance that Johnny Depp
won't be playing The Mad Hatter?
Posted: Sat Jul 26, 2008 2:34 am
by kaujot
Johnny Depp will play Alice.
Alice in Wonderland
Posted: Sat Jul 26, 2008 7:21 am
by Kirkinson
I'm a fairly strong fan of Tim Burton and a positively obsessive fan of Lewis Carroll, but I'm not at all enthusiastic about this project. A special effects extravaganza is absolutely the wrong way to go about translating the book to film. It's a very strangely structured, episodic story that doesn't lend itself well to the Hollywood three-act tradition, and it's also a very talky book where most of the charm and humor comes from the wordplay. Despite Burton's presence, the fact that this is a big-budget, high-profile Disney film written by one of their regular scribes makes me very worried that they'll try to downplay the dialogue in favor of effects sequences and impose some sort of moral goal onto the story to give it a false sense of traditional plot progression. Add the inevitable list of celebrity cameos and we'll end up with what is essentially a more expensive version of the Hallmark/NBC TV-movie from 1999 (which has its moments -- Gene Wilder can't help but be utterly charming as the Mock Turtle -- but is largely a grating chore to get through).
The only way this can be saved is if Burton really asserts himself in process. Carroll's work can be a tremendous springboard for filmmakers who want to do something original and idiosyncratic with the material (like Svankmajer) and Burton has expressed a great deal of respect for the books in the past. I remain extremely wary, though.
Jeff wrote:Is there even a remote chance that Johnny Depp won't be playing The Mad Hatter?
There is, if he ends up playing the Cheshire Cat instead. Of course, this is a motion-capture movie, so he could end up playing
both parts and more. I wonder where Helena Bonham Carter will show up (the Queen?).
Posted: Sat Jul 26, 2008 3:43 pm
by Antoine Doinel
Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 12:51 am
by Antoine Doinel
Ridley Scott's
Nottingham has been
put on hold.
Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 1:33 am
by Rufus T. Firefly
Belmondo is back. His first feature in nearly 10 years,
Un homme et son chien, is a remake of
Umberto D of all things. The cast seems to include many other geriatrics including Micheline Presle, Max von Sydow, Charles Aznavour, Pierre Mondy, Francoise Fabian and Jean-Pierre Marielle. Everybody but Alain Delon, though his son Anthony is in it.
Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 1:44 am
by domino harvey
Rufus T. Firefly wrote:Belmondo is back. His first feature in nearly 10 years,
Un homme et son chien, is a remake of
Umberto D of all things.
I could have sworn he was dead
Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 6:30 pm
by Antoine Doinel
Antoine Doinel wrote:Wong Kar-Wai has his
next project lined up.
Details on WKW's involvement in the wedding, including his soundtrack selections.
Terry Gilliam to
take another stab at Don Quixote.
Posted: Tue Jul 29, 2008 9:53 pm
by chaddoli
Jeff wrote:Dylan wrote:Tim Burton is making his version of Alice in Wonderland.
Is there even a remote chance that Johnny Depp
won't be playing The Mad Hatter?
Ding ding ding! (apologize for the source)
Casting Tim Burton movies is so easy...
Posted: Sat Aug 02, 2008 8:21 am
by John Cope
Great, great
news for fans of Philip Ridley. I can't believe I missed this until now. Luckily I stumbled across it during one of my semi-regular searches for the OOP French
Darkly Noon (and I found
that this time, too!).
Posted: Sat Aug 02, 2008 10:38 pm
by Jeff
chaddoli wrote:Casting Tim Burton movies is so easy...
It really is. At least Depp already has the
costume. Now is there any doubt about HBC as The Queen of Hearts?
In other news...
[i][url=http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117989930.html?categoryid=13&cs=1]Variety[/url][/i] wrote:Robert De Niro is near a deal to join Mel Gibson in "Edge of Darkness," the
Martin Campbell-directed feature for Graham King's GK Films. Shooting begins this month in Massachusetts.
Gibson stars as Thomas Craven, a straitlaced homicide detective for the Boston Police Dept. and single father, whose 24-year old daughter is murdered on the steps of his home. The cop assumes he was the target, but his investigation leads in another direction and uncovers his daughter's secret life, a corporate cover-up and government collusion.
De Niro will play an operative sent to clean up the evidence.
Pic marks the first film that Gibson has toplined since "Signs" and "We Were Soldiers" in 2002. Scripted by
William Monahan, the drama is an adaptation of a 1985 BAFTA-winning six-hour BBC miniseries that Campbell also directed.
King is financing the picture and has received a SAG waiver. He will produce with Michael Wearing, who served in that capacity in on the mini. BBC is also producing.
Deal marks the first for Endeavor since signing De Niro, who recently completed "Everybody's Fine" and will next be seen starring with Al Pacino in the Jon Avnet-directed "Righteous Kill."
Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2008 1:34 pm
by Fletch F. Fletch
An
unofficial sequel to Streets of Fire?!
Insofar as they can without being sued by the studio that owns the rights.
Here is the official site.
Posted: Wed Aug 06, 2008 7:19 pm
by Matt
I weep for my people (and for horror fans, Poe fans, Corman fans, and anyone whose eyes ever happen to clap onto one of these "films") over
this news:
David DeCoteau redoing horror films
Cult director inks deal for 10 films, two TV series
By Gregg Goldstein
Aug 5, 2008, 06:53 PM ET
NEW YORK -- Several classic horror tales are getting a gay makeover courtesy of Regent Studios, its sister cable channel Here! Networks and cult director David DeCoteau.
The helmer has inked a two-year deal with Regent to direct 10 films and two television series through his Rapid Heart Pictures shingle.
The projects, some of which will be released theatrically by Regent in the fall, include Edgar Allan Poe's "The Pit and the Pendulum" and adaptations of works by H.G. Wells and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. New features will also be made for "The Brotherhood" and "The Invisible Chronicles," two ongoing TV/DVD series.
All of the legendary tales in the slate will be refashioned to include gay themes, as was DeCoteau's recently released Poe adaptation "House of Usher." The only film confirmed for release this Fall is the "pansexual" film noir "Playing With Fire," starring Susan Anton and Michael Bergin.
DeCoteau has produced and/or directed more than 50 genre films over the past two decades, including "Leeches!" "Creepozoids" and "Sorority Babes in the Slimeball Bowl-O-Rama," after his start in the mid-'80s gay porn industry.
The title IMDb has for
Playing With Fire is
The Devil is a Woman. It may be a coincidence, but I have been dreaming of making a queer version of
La Femme et le pantin for years and so help me God if fucking David DeCoteau is beating me to the punch with "Stop Susan Williams" and a washed-up underwear model...
Posted: Wed Aug 06, 2008 7:51 pm
by chaddoli
Posted: Wed Aug 06, 2008 8:20 pm
by Dylan
Anybody know if Scott Heim (
Mysterious Skin) is still writing the screenplay for this?