Tuesday, 31 August 2010

Grown Ups defeats Scott Pilgrim at the UK box office

UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 27th - Sunday 29th August 2010.

Comedy appeared to be the order of the day for the last weekend of August with big hitters Grown Ups and Scott Pilgrim vs. The World squaring off against each other for the title of UK box office champion. Grown Ups - which stars Saturday Night Live alumni Adam Sandler, Chris Rock, David Spade and Rob Schneider (along with Paul Blart: Mall Cop's Kevin James) - banked £2m to take the top spot, giving Sandler his biggest ever opening in the UK and leaving Edgar Wright's comic book adaptation Scott Pilgrim to settle for second place with £1.6m.

Another two newcomers manage to make an appearance this week, albeit in the opposite end of the chart - Thor Freudenthal's adaptation of the Jeff Kinney book Diary of a Wimpy Kid takes eighth with £671k while the special edition release of James Cameron's Avatar takes ninth, adding another £624k to extend its record-setting gross to a whopping £92.8m.

Heading up the list of familiar faces is Disney-Pixar's smash hit animation Toy Story 3, which holds on to third and adds another £1.5m for a total of £67.6m after six weeks on release, while Last week's top two films - actionfests The Expendables and Salt - both fall three spots to fourth and fifth respectively. Filling out the bottom half of the chart are horror remake Pirahna 3D (down two to sixth), Christopher Nolan's Inception (down one to seventh), and the critically mauled Marmaduke (down five to tenth).

Number one this time last year: The Final Destination































































































































































Pos.FilmWeekend GrossWeekTotal UK Gross
1Grown Ups
£2,006,9451£2,006,945
2Scott Pilgrim vs. The World
£1,604,5451





















































£1,604,545
3Toy Story 3£1,499,5246































































£67,593,215
4The Expendables£1,311,3812































































£6,816,414
5Salt£967,8832











































































£4,383,618
6Pirahna 3D£886,4952£3,287,882
7Inception£699,0417

























































£33,085,858
8Diary of a Wimpy Kid
£671,1611















































































£671,161
9Avatar£624,1061









































































£92,813,108
10Marmaduke£586,7152













































































£2,938,461


Incoming...

A whole host of new releases make their debut this coming Friday including DC Comics adaptation Jonah Hex (cert. 15), rom-com The Switch (cert. 12A), comedy Dinner For Schmucks (cert. 12A) and horror The Last Exorcism (cert. 15). If none of those tickle your fancy then there's also the choice between Brit crime thriller Bonded By Blood (cert. TBC) and Tyler Perry comedy drama Why Did I Get Married Too? (cert. TBC), along with Bollywood efforts Nandalala (cert. 12A) and Chhevan Dariya (cert. TBC).

U.K. Box Office Archive
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Monday, 30 August 2010

British Cinema: Kandahar Break (2009)

Kandahar Break: Fortress of War, 2009.

Directed by David Whitney.
Starring Shaun Dooley, Dean Andrews, Rasheed Naz and Tatmain Ul Qulb.

Kandahar Break
SYNOPSIS:

A British mine clearance engineer is pursued across the desert after falling foul of a corrupt police chief in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.

Kandahar Break
The feature debut of British writer-director David Whitney, Kandahar Break: Fortress of War takes us back to a pre-9/11 Afghanistan during the height of Taliban control and stars Shaun Dooley (Eden Lake) as Richard Lee, an ex-British army bomb disposal expert now earning his living as a privately-contracted British engineer. After spending time working in Africa, Lee returns to Afghanistan in 1999 to fulfil a mine clearance contract on behalf of the Taliban government, who have since came to power and exerted their will upon the country.

Reuniting with co-workers Steve Delamore (Life on Mars’ Dean Andrews) and translator Jamilah (newcomer Tatmain Ul Qulb, who impresses in her first role), a young Afghan woman with whom he has a romantic past, Lee is warned of the strict enforcement of Sharia law and the Taliban's thirst for conflict. Despite this, his naïve ignorance quickly brings him into confrontation with his employers when on first day at work he finds himself staring down the barrel of an AK-47 after urinating within the vicinity of a Muslim woman.

Having witnessed first-hand the brutality of the regime, Lee announces his intention to take Jamilah to London to escape the oppression but his troubles are further compounded when the local Taliban governor Ashiq Khan (Rasheed Naz) replaces her as his translator. After the two are seen sharing a kiss Jamilah is kidnapped by an enraged mob and taken to be stoned as punishment. Although he manages to disrupt the proceedings Lee is unsuccessful in his efforts to save Jamilah’s life and - condemned to death himself - his only option is to flee Kandahar and embark on a perilous journey across the Afghan desert towards the sanctuary of the Pakistan border.

Kandahar Break's pre-war setting presents a refreshing and somewhat insightful change to current trends and the film is entirely convincing in its representation of a corrupt regime exerting their control over the weary Afghan people. With the production hazarding the dangerous tribal regions of Pakistan in its quest for authenticity – a decision which almost turned to tragedy when four Pakistani crew members were injured when rebels opened fire on their mini-bus – questions are also raised about the effectiveness of the ongoing Afghan conflict.

However, while a title like Kandahar Break: Fortress of War may conjure the impression of yet another artistic take on the War on Terror, it is difficult really to describe the film as such. Whitney actually delivers a film of two halves, starting out with a simple ‘forbidden love’ story against the backdrop of the Taliban’s extremist ideology, which quickly segues into a chase-thriller as Lee is pursued by both the government and his co-workers in his desperate trek to safety. Throw in a little socio-political commentary, convincing performances from its cast and accomplished cinematography and what you have is a rather decent drama that manages to deliver for the majority of its duration. Whitney has certainly shown his potential as a filmmaker and with a handful of festival awards under his belt for Kandahar Break, he could be one to watch out for as his career progresses.

Kandahar Break receives a limited theatrical release in select UK cinemas from September 10th and is released on DVD and Blu-ray September 13th. View the trailer here.

Gary Collinson

Movie Review Archive
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Sunday, 29 August 2010

Behind-the-scenes featurettes from Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows

Harry Potter and the Deathly HallowsWe're now less than three months away from the release of the first part of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, which marks the beginning of the end for the most lucrative movie franchise in history. Having split the final instalment of J. K. Rowling's best-selling series in two and armed with a budget rumoured to be in the region of $500m for the back-to-back productions, Order of the Phoenix and Half-Blood Prince director David Yates will be hoping the bring the saga to a fitting conclusion (and rake in the box office returns) when it opens world-wide this coming November.

The Deathly Hallows sees Harry Potter (Daniel Radcliffe), Ron Weasley (Rupert Grint) and Hermione Granger (Emma Watson) set out to track down and destroy the Horcruxes, Lord Voldemort's (Ralph Fiennes) secret to immortality and destruction as the Dark Lord unleashes his war against the wizarding world. Newcomers to the cast include Ciarán Hinds (Aberforth Dumbledore) Rhys Ifans (Xenophilius Lovegood) and Bill Nighy (Rufus Scrimgeour), in addition to a host of familiar faces including Helena Bonham Carter, Robbie Coltrane, Tom Felton, Brendan Gleeson, Richard Griffiths, John Hurt, Jason Isaacs, Helen McCrory, Miranda Richardson, Alan Rickman, Maggie Smith, Timothy Spall, Imelda Staunton, David Thewlis, Julie Walters and Bonnie Wright.

To whet your appetite for the upcoming film, why not check out these three behind-the-scenes featurettes entitled "The Story", "Forest Run" and "On the Run"...






Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part I is released in North America and the UK on November 19th 2010, with Part II following on July 15th 2011. Watch the trailer here.
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Cult Cinema: The Strange Vice Of Mrs. Wardh (1971)

The Strange Vice Of Mrs. Wardh, 1971.

Directed by Sergio Martino.
Starring George Hilton, Edwige Fenech, Conchita Airoldi, Manuel Gil and Carlo Alighiero.

The Strange Vice Of Mrs. Wardh
SYNOPSIS:

A restless woman becomes embroiled in a horrifying mystery that threatens to drive her to the brink of madness... or worse.

The Strange Vice Of Mrs. Wardh
Lo strano vizio della Signora Wardh (1971) is a Giallo par excellence. Directed by Sergio Martino (The Case Of The Scorpion’s Tail, All The Colors Of The Dark), and starring none other than the queen of the Giallo herself, Edwige Fenech (Strip Nude For Your Killer), it represents something that a film obsessive will seldom discover yet constantly seeks – the rare gem. A piece that, despite being so great, is so difficult to get hold of. In this case one can only see the film by importing a rather peculiar looking Thai DVD, or settling for the lacklustre MYA Communications effort. The now legendary NoShame DVD, complete with its thirty-minute documentary on the film, entitled “Fear Behind The Door”, could set you back a walloping £80! Well, enough of the DVD nerd mumbo-jumbo, “why is this film so great?” I hear you ask…

The Strange Vice Of Mrs. Wardh – also known as Next! and Blade Of The Ripper – was released at the heart of the Giallo boom in Italy, which lasted from about 1965-1975. It concentrates on a series of grisly murders, the victims of which all have some connection to our heroine, Julie Wardh (Fenech). Mrs. Wardh is quite the minx, balancing three lovers at once, as well as a… strange vice.

The ninety-minute film can be split into two sections, the first sixty minutes plays like a typical Giallo: it has its black-gloved killer, who never leaves home without his straight razor; and it has its glamorous females and wonderfully dressed males (along with a haunting theme to boot). Here Martino does ‘Giallo’ perfectly, and whilst I was very impressed the first hour does not really go beyond this. Indeed, an hour into the film one finds oneself in a strange situation: yes, the film is perfect and has everything a Euro-trash fan could desire (the music, the melodrama, the tackily exotic characters), however it does not seem to be going passed that. At this point one is thinking of the intelligence behind The Bird With The Crystal Plumage (Argento, 1970) and wondering whether or not it will rear its beautiful head in Martino’s world. Don’t get me wrong, the film is fantastic and there are some wonderful suspense scenes, including a nail-biting chase in an underground car park, but it is not until the second part – the thirty-minute finale – that things really get interesting. Such an incredible piece of cinema; a snowballing, twist-laden, ever-developing mystery unfolds before our very eyes and reveals The Strange Vice Of Mrs. Wardh to be one of the genre's greatest artefacts.

I will not give away the ending; in fact I haven’t really given away much of the film whatsoever. A quick look at the IMDB synopsis is enough to whet one's appetite:
"An ambassador's wife discovers that one of the men in her life – either her husband, an ex-lover or her current lover – may be a vicious serial killer."
See what I mean by ‘typical’ sounding? Don’t let this fool you, the execution by all involved really makes this film stand out in a genre which already has so many recommendations. What’s not to like? Go forth and seek it out!

Robert Cowlin

Movie Review Archive
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Saturday, 28 August 2010

Movies... For Free! Duel (1971)

Duel, 1971.

Directed by Steven Spielberg.
Starring Dennis Weaver, Carey Loftin and Jacqueline Scott.

Duel Steven Spielberg
Written by I Am Legend novelist Richard Matheson and based off his own short story that had featured in Playboy, Duel is a psychological thriller about a motorist (Dennis Weaver) who is stalked by a crazed truck driver (Carey Loftin). It is notable for being the feature debut of Steven Spielberg, who had recently signed to a contract with Universal and had been honing his skills on the well-received TV pilot Night Gallery (1969) and episodes of several TV shows including Marcus Welby, M.D. (1970), Columbo (1971) and Owen Marshall: Counselor at Law (1971).

Shot on location in 13 days for an original running time of 74 minutes, Duel enjoyed high ratings when it premiered on US television as an ABC Movie of the Week in November 1971. This prompted Spielberg to embark on two additional days of filming, extending the movie to 90 minutes for a theatrical release in Europe and the UK (along with a limited North American release the following year). With the success Duel establishing Spielberg as a major emerging talent, he would go on to produce two further TV movies before making his theatrical feature film debut in 1974 with The Sugarland Express.

For more on Steven Spielberg, check out Trevor Hogg's in-depth career profile Encountering Spielberg and be sure to vote in our poll for your favourite Steven Spielberg movie.


Embed courtesy of GoogleVideo.

Related:

Five Essential Films of Steven Spielberg
Short Film Showcase - Amblin' (1968)

Click here to view more short films and public domain features.
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Friday, 27 August 2010

Movies That Might Have Been - The Beatles Do The Lord of the Rings

Gary Collinson ponders the fate of The Lord of the Rings had the stars aligned differently in Movies That Might Have Been...

What We Got…

Fans of J. R. R. Tolkien’s classic fantasy epic The Lord of the Rings were surely satisfied with Peter Jackson’s Award-winning trilogy, which remained pretty much faithful to the sacred source text and adopted the book's three-part structure of The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers and The Return of the King. Jackson and his special effects house Weta Digitial brought Middle-Earth to life with state of the art visual techniques and a near-perfect cast that included Elijah Wood (Frodo), Ian McKellen (Gandalf), Sean Astin (Sam), Viggo Mortensen (Aragorn), Orlando Bloom (Legolas), Christopher Lee (Saruman), Hugo Weaving (Elrond) and Liv Tyler (Arwen), along with the splendid motion capture work of Andy Serkis as Gollum.

Released in three installments between 2001 - 2003, The Lord of the Rings delighted audiences and critics alike on its way to a world-wide gross of almost $3 billion and a place as one of the most popular film franchises of all time. The series sparked a resurgance in the big-budget fantasy genre along with a host of prestigious awards, while anticipation for the oft-delayed prequel The Hobbit continues to grow by the day.

What Might Have Been...

Back in the mid-1960s when discussing possible projects for their three picture deal with United Artists, John Lennon was lobbying his fellow band-mates in The Beatles to bring The Lord of the Rings to the screen. His proposal would have seen Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr as hobbits Frodo and Sam, with George Harrison as Gandalf (he certainly looked the part) and Lennon taking on the role of Gollum. Unfortunately - and perhaps rather unsurprisingly - the former Oxford University professor wasn't too keen on letting The Beatles loose on his baby and nixed the idea, holding onto the film rights until 1969 by which time a Beatles adaptation was a tad unlikely.

So, how would a Beatles take on The Lord of the Rings have gone down? When you consider their output around that time (the utterly bizarre Yellow Submarine, for example) and the amount of mind-altering substances that would have no doubt inspired the look and feel of the picture, you can only begin to imagine how surreal this could have turned out. It would certainly have been an experience and, as Peter Jackson commented back in 2002 when hearing the news direct from McCartney himself, “there probably would’ve been some good songs coming off the album.”

With that in mind, let’s take a look at some of the possibilities for the soundtrack to The Beatles Do The Lord of The Rings

Across the Middle-Earth
Dragons in the Sky with Nazgûl
Everybody’s Got Something To Hide Except Me and My Gamgee
Good Mordor, Good Mordor
I Am the Warg-rus
Lady Galadriel
The Ballad of Sam and Frodo
The Continuing Story of Tom Bombadil
The Eye on the Hill
When I’m Eleventy-One

Have we missed out then?

There's no doubting the quality of Jackson's trilogy, which has to be one of the most definitive adaptations of just about anything ever, but thirty-odd years is more than enough time for a reboot. The Beatles version of The Lord of the Rings would likely have been a 'loose' adaptation at best, but certainly a moneymaker in its day and something that I'm sure a lot of people would love to have seen come to fruition. Let's face it - it certainly couldn't have been any worse than Ralph Bakshi's animated effort from 1978.

Alas, it just wasn't to be so if you want to see the Fab Four larking about on ring-centric adventures then you'll just have to make do with Help! I'm afraid.

Any thoughts on how you think this would have worked out? Any more song titles?? Feel free to leave your comments...

Gary Collinson
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Thursday, 26 August 2010

Thoughts on... Scott Pilgrim vs. The World (2010)

Scott Pilgrim vs. The World, 2010.

Directed by Edgar Wright.
Starring Michael Cera, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Ellen Wong, and Kieran Culkin.

Scott Pilgrim vs The World
SYNOPSIS:

In order to date the girl of his dreams Ramona Flowers, Scott Pilgrim must defeat her seven evil ex’s.

Scott Pilgrim vs The World
Having so much hype around a film can ensure that unless the film lives up to its expectations, it can leave you with a feeling of disappointment, which I’m afraid, was the case for Scott Pilgrim vs. The World. I’m not saying the film was bad; in fact I really enjoyed it, it just wasn’t amazing. The cast were brilliant, and I’m big fan of Edgar Wright, but there were some parts of this film that just didn’t work.

Scott Pilgrim (Michael Cera) is an unemployed bass player who spends his time rehearsing with his band and holding hands with his seventeen year old girlfriend Knives Chau (Ellen Wong). That is, until he meets Ramona Flowers (Mary Elizabeth Winstead). Completely infatuated, Scott pursues Ramona until they eventually begin dating. Unfortunately for Scott this means he must now defeat her seven evil ex’s.

The part of the film I really enjoyed most was probably the beginning. It was funny, witty, the acting was excellent, and I loved the perfectly balanced mixture between reality and the gaming world. Somewhere between the fight scenes I started to lose interest. The problem is that after the first battle the rest of the film is like a staccato of scenes; nothing flowed together and each scene seemed to jump into the next. The fight scenes themselves were great and each ex was very different from the previous, in terms of both appearance and supernatural abilities. The fights were well choreographed, entertaining, and I loved that each ex exploded into coins after being defeated.

What got tedious was Ramona disappearing or breaking up with Scott after every battle and Scott then moping around after her until the next fight sequence. By the fifth or sixth ex I was bored and wanted the film to be over. That being said the final fight sequence was by far the best, it’s just a shame that the time it took to get there felt a bit like being pulled in six different directions at once.

The film did have its good elements, and I think the cast was one of the reasons why I did enjoy the film. Ellen Wong as Scott’s seventeen year old slightly stalker-ish girlfriend was probably one of the best, although Kieran Culkin who played Wallace, Scott’s gay roommate, was another performance that I really enjoyed. Each of Ramona’s ex’s were played by some great actors, one of my favourites being Brandon Routh (although I am a slightly biased fan ever since Superman and Chuck), who had vegan superpowers.

While Scott Pilgrim isn’t amazing, it’s certainly worth viewing and deserves more box office attention than its competitors The Expendables and Eat, Pray, Love. Just don’t expect the film to be as good as the hype.

Vicki Isitt

Movie Review Archive
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Wednesday, 25 August 2010

First trailer for Danny Boyle's 127 Hours

British director Danny Boyle (28 Days Later) follows up the BAFTA and Academy Award-winning Slumdog Millionaire this November with 127 Hours, a drama based on the true story of Aron Ralston, the American mountaineer who came to attention back in 2003 when he amputated his own arm after becoming trapped by a boulder for five days. The film sees Boyle reunite with Slumdog scribe Simon Beaufoy (The Full Monty) and producer Christian Colson (The Descent), with Spider-Man's James Franco in the lead role as Ralston alongside supporting players Lizzy Caplan (Cloverfield), Kate Mara (Brokeback Mountain) and Amber Tamblyn (The Grudge 2).

Check out the first trailer from the film, which has made its way onto the internet this week...


127 Hours is set to premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival this September and goes on general release in North America on November 5th, 2010. No word yet on a UK release, although the film is scheduled to close the 2010 London Film Festival in October and you'd have to expect it to hit cinemas in time for awards season consideration.
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Encountering Spielberg: A Steven Spielberg Profile (Part 1)

Trevor Hogg profiles the career of legendary Hollywood filmmaker Steven Spielberg in the first of a five part feature...

Steven Spielberg“My childhood was bad and it was good. It was chaotic; it was noisy; it was real loud. I have a big family, with three younger sisters,” stated American filmmaker Steven Spielberg whose reserved father, Arnold, was an electrical engineer for General Electric and his doting mother, Leah, a former concert pianist. “My dad was of that World War II ethic. He brought home the bacon, and my mother cooked it, and we ate it. I went to my dad for things, but he was always analytical. I was more passionate in my approach to any question, and so we always clashed.” Leaving behind his hometown of Cincinnati, Ohio, the young boy found himself and his family being transplanted to New Jersey and then to Arizona. Certain rules had to be followed in the Spielberg household. “My parents rationed television and motion pictures. I could only see films in their presence and usually pictures that appealed more to them, which today you would call of the General Audience nature, like Danny Kaye [White Christmas] pictures, musicals like The Court Jester [1955] and Funny Face [1957] with Audrey Hepburn [Roman Holiday], and Disney films.”

The desire to become a filmmaker came out of necessity for the legendary Hollywood director. “It developed because my father would take a lot of home movies on our camping trips. I had an outdoorsy family and we would spend three-day weekends on outings in sleeping bags in the middle of the wilderness up in the White Mountains of Arizona. My dad would take the camera along and film the trips and we’d sit down and watch the footage a week later. It would put me right to sleep.” To correct the situation Spielberg produced his first theatrical productions. “I began to actually stage the camping trips and later cut out the bad footage.” Spielberg’s interest in the cinematic craft accelerated when he took a novel approach to achieve a childhood goal. “I was a Boy Scout who wanted to get a merit badge in photography. The prerequisite was that you had to tell the story with still photos. Rather than shoot stills, I took my movie camera and made a little Western three minutes long, using friends of mine from the same Boy Scout troop. I cut the film in the camera [didn’t do any splicing when I got home] and showed it to the Boy Scouts a week later. Not only did I get my merit badge, but I got whoops and screams and applause and everything else that made me want to do it more and more.” Wanting to recapture the moment, the twelve year old was soon at work creating a follow-up to The Last Train Wreck (1957). “It influenced me enough to want to go off and make another Western, seven minutes long – using two rolls of film. It [The Last Gun, 1959] was a little more sophisticated.”

“I made a war film next called Fighter Squad [1961], because I was inspired by those 8mm Castle Film capsule documentaries of the Forties,” recalled Steven Spielberg whose cinematic ambitions fueled his ingenuity. “They were in black and white and they had great gun camera shots of tracer bullets flying out and Messerschmitts catching fire and plunging to earth and tanks and trains exploding. I’d buy seven or eight of those films and pull out all the exciting shots and write a movie around them.” The resourcefulness of the aspiring filmmaker did not end there. “I used young people in the neighbourhood, friends of mine from school. If I needed a shot of a young flyer pulling back on the stick of a P-51, we’d go out to the Skyharbor Airport in Phoenix and climb into a P-51[after our parents got us permission] and I’d shoot the close-up of the stick being pulled back. Then I’d cut to a piece of stock footage of the airplane going into a climb. Then I’d cut back to a close-up of a fourteen year old friend of mine grinning sadistically. Then another close-up of his thumb hitting the button. Then another stock shot of the gun mounts firing. I’d put the whole thing together that way.”

When it came to making a movie which people would want to see Steven Spielberg set about mastering the art of storytelling. “Most of my scripts were written on the backs of graded arithmetic papers, in loose-leaf notebooks, anywhere I could find something to write on. Most of the time I would write the scripts, commit them to memory and then tell people what to do. It wasn’t until much later that I would sit down at a typewriter, write a shooting script, make Xerox copies and hand them out. But it was one of the best lessons I ever learned. I learned to keep a film in my head, then dole out what was needed to be told to people who were performing and who were being the technicians.” Recognition for his flourishing cinematic talent was beginning to go beyond Spielberg’s residential neighbourhood with the release of his forty-minute war picture Escape to Nowhere (1961). “One of my films won first prize at an amateur film festival, the Canyon Film Festival in Arizona, and the prize was a 16mm camera…I was fifteen. But I knew I couldn’t afford 16mm processing...so I traded the camera in on a Bolex-H8 8mm movie camera. It was very fancy equipment at the time. At the same time, with a little help from my dad, I got a Bolex Sonerizer, which was the first piece of technology capable of recording sound directly onto 8mm film with a magnetic coating down the side. Now I was able to make pictures, send the cut footage to Eastman Kodak and have them put the magnetic stripe on and send it back to me. Then I would post-sync all the dialogue, sound effects and music in our living room.”

Next Steven Spielberg branched into a genre with which he has become synonymous. “I did science fiction movies and, with the Bolex, I was able to shoot a sequence, rewind the film and then shoot double-exposures – people disappearing, beautiful young women turning into ghoulish nightmares. I’d use the old Lon Chaney dissolve trick – applying a little more makeup every few feet and dissolving from one stage of malignant facial growth to the next until I had Vampira.” To complete his cinematic vision, Spielberg ventured into the realm of post-production. “I edited everything myself. Once I discovered how important a cut was, I never cut in the camera again. I would shoot all the master shots on one roll, all the close-ups on another roll and all of the action and trick shots on a third roll. Then I would break the film down and hang all the separate shots on pins on a little makeshift cutting rack in my bedroom at home. I’d label each one of them with a piece of tape, identifying it by number, what was in the scene, and where it was to go. Then I would pull each one of its pin and cut the way they cut today. So I really assembled the film. I became a film editor before I became a professional director.”

Steven Spielberg FirelightProducing his independently-funded pictures had become more expensive resulting in Steven Spielberg adopting an enterprising financial solution. “The audience was usually composed of children under twelve. I sold tickets for a dime [later raising it to quarter] and they’d come over to my house. We’d used the family room and they’d sit on card-table chairs. That was my first audience – youngsters. I made a film at sixteen called Firelight, which was a very ambitious science fiction film that ran two and a half hours. It was made with a sound stripe and had sync dialogue, music and sound effects created in the camera involving four, five, and sometimes ten passes on a single piece of film. I showed the film a buck a head to 500 people. The film cost $400 and I made $100 profit on the first night it showed. My father was transferred and we moved the next day to San Francisco – actually twenty-four hours after the premier of my first sophisticated full-length movie. After that my life changed and I went without film for about two years while I was trying to get out of high school, get some decent grades and find a college. I got serious about studying.”

Even though he was able to indulge himself in his creative passion, Steven Spielberg reflects on his childhood with a hint of regret. “All the guys who discovered girls early never had anything to do with my movies. The guys who were dating at twelve and thirteen thought making movies was kid stuff, and so most of the friends I had helping me on those films were the late-starters in life.” The director’s younger sister Anne sees things differently. “He had more friends than he remembers having. I don’t think he realized the crushes that some girls had on him. Some of my friends had major crushes on him. If you looked at a picture of him then, you’d say, ‘Yes, there’s a nerd. There’s the crewcut, the flattop, there are the ears. There’s the skinny body.’ But he really had an incredible personality. He could make people do things. He made everything he was going to do sound like you wished you were a part of it.” Assessing his short films, Steven Spielberg remarked, “They were recognizably home movies with youngsters with cowboy hats and German combat helmets. It is a joke to see them today. What surprised me was there was technique in some of the earliest films, the fast cutting.”

Amblin poster Steven SpielbergAddressing the Hollywood folklore about him deviously inhabiting an empty office on the Universal Studio lot, which allowed him to establish the necessary industry contacts to get his moviemaking career started, Spielberg remarked, “The first job came when Sid Sheinberg, who was president of television production at Universal at the time, saw a twenty-four minute short I had made called Amblin’ [1968]. I made the short while I was a student at Cal State, Long Beach, but not as part of the film program of Cal State; it was done on my own with $15,000 from Dennis Hoffman, an independent producer. When Sid Sheinberg saw it, he just said, very simply, ‘I’d like you to spend the next seven years of your life here at Universal Studios. Along with that, you will be directing, writing, and producing. How would you like that? How does that sound?’ Well, it sounded fine to me. There were no other jobs in the offing, and I had just turned twenty-one. It was a dream come true. He immediately put me into a TV movie, a pilot trilogy called Night Gallery. I shot the second section with Joan Crawford [Mildred Pierce], a forty-three minute story written by Rod Serling [Twilight Zone]. I didn’t work for a year after the show came out.”

Asked about the hitchhiking picture which serves as the namesake of his production company, Spielberg confessed, “Amblin’ was an attack of crass commercialism. I had made a lot of little films in 16mm that were getting me nowhere. They were very esoteric. I wanted to shoot something that could prove to the people who finance movies that I could certainly look like a professional moviemaker….The only challenge that’s close to my heart about Amblin’ is I was able to tell a story about a boy [Richard Levin] and a girl [Pamela McMyler] with no dialogue. That was something I set out to do before I found out I couldn’t afford sound even if I wanted it.” Spielberg added, “When I look back at that film, I can easily say, ‘No, wonder I didn’t go to Kent State,’ or ‘No wonder I didn’t go to Vietnam or I wasn’t protesting when all my friends were carrying signs and getting clubbed in Century City.’ I was off making movies, and Amblin’ is a slick byproduct of a kid immersed in film.”

Steven Spielberg is a strong believer in being proactive. “Studios aren’t buying qualities like eagerness and enthusiasm and a willingness to learn. They want material evidence that you’re a moviemaker who’s going to turn a profit. They want to see and feel how good you are before they’re going to give you $300,000 to make a movie. I began by making 8 and 16mm films, some for $15 a piece and some for $200. You can’t excuse yourself by saying, ‘Well, I can’t raise the money to make the short film to get into the front door and show my work.’”

Directing episodes for television series such as Marcus Welby, M.D. (1970), The Name of the Game (1971), The Psychiatrist (1971), Columbo (1971) and Owen Marshall: Counselor at Law (1971), the young director found his big screen filming sensibilities being frustrated by the unwillingness of those in the TV industry to breakaway from traditional shooting techniques. “Fancy footwork isn’t smiled upon in TV,” declared Steven Spielberg who was responsible for creating a one-hour show in six days. “The one thing I refused to conform to was the television formula of close-up, two-shot, over-the-shoulders and master shot. I kept hoping that every time I’d make a TV show, enough people would see it and like my work and give me a feature to do, but it took a number of years before they began knocking on my door.”

Duel poster Steven SpielbergHelping Steven Spielberg gain the attention of Hollywood was a television movie about a man (Dennis Weaver) terrorized by a predatory truck driver. To map out the story, the young filmmaker created a forty yard long and five feet tall production board. “I did it at first as a visual overview for myself, because the script was so verbose,” explained Spielberg on how he went about making his 1971 effort Duel. “I had to break the script down and visualize the entire movie on a road stretched all around the production office. I divided up each key moment and gave it a nickname and was able to walk the network people through the entire story.” The unconventional approach became an indispensable tool. “I think without the overview I would be a little confused about where to the put the cameras, and I shot it in sixteen days. It was really a movie that should have been done in fifty days.”

Watched by 15 million American TV viewers, the small screen picture was a major hit for Steven Spielberg. “After Duel came out on television, that first week, my agent received ten or fifteen feature film offers.” With additional scenes added, the road thriller was given a European theatrical release. “Dylis Powell saw the picture and she flipped out for it,” recalled Spielberg who credits The Sunday Times film critic as being an instrumental supporter. “She gathered all the London critics together in one room and showed it to them one night, and the criticism got Universal and the C.I.C. to release the picture in Europe.”

Two more TV movies were helmed by the Ohio native. A demonic-possession horror tale starring Sandy Dennis (Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?) and Darren McGavin (A Christmas Story) called Something Evil (1972) aired on CBS; NBC broadcasted Savage (1973), a story about a journalist played by Martin Landau (Ed Wood) who discovers a blackmail plot. “You can do five bad television shows but you cannot make five bad motion pictures; ‘bad’ meaning films that aren’t received critically and commercially,” observed Spielberg who had originally planned to make his theatrical feature debut with White Lightning (1973) starring Burt Reynolds (Boogie Nights). “And so I just waited and waited and waited. I had a little bet with myself that the first movie I ever directed would be from my own story and it was really sort of a mental deterrent for other projects that came along. I’d say to myself, well, I could direct this, but I couldn’t film this and then The Sugarland Express [1974]. I had read a story in the Citizen News that was about the Texas hijacking and I wrote the original story…it was worth waiting for.”

Continue to part two.

For more on Steven Spielberg, visit the official Dreamworks website.

Related:

Five Essential Films of Steven Spielberg
Movies... For Free! Duel (1971)
Short Film Showcase - Amblin' (1968)

Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
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Tuesday, 24 August 2010

The Expendables overthrow Toy Story 3 at the UK box office

UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 20th - Sunday 22nd August 2010.

With a line-up that includes Jason Statham, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren, Mickey Rourke, Bruce Willis, Arnold Schwarzenegger and director Sylvester Stallone, action ensemble The Expendables proves too much for Angelina Jolie's Salt and takes first place in the chart with £3.9m (including £1.8m from previews last Saturday and Sunday) as torrential rain across the country results in a bumper weekend for the UK box office.

Salt
also benefits from two days of preview screenings to claim second with £2.1m as Toy Story 3 finally vacates the top spot five weeks into its record-breaking run (with £63.8m, the Pixar animation now stands at fifth in the all-time UK rankings). Meanwhile two other new releases debut in the top five with horror remake Piranha 3D banking £1.4m and family comedy Marmaduke pulling in £1.2m to take fourth and fifth respectively.

After climbing back up the charts these past few weeks Christopher Nolan's Inception finally drops out of the top half but manages to add another £1m to push its total gross to £31.5m, while M. Night Shyamalan's The Last Airbender and Disney's live-action fantasy The Sorcerer's Apprentice also drop five spaces to eighth and tenth. Slightly more fortunate are Knight and Day and Step Up 3D, both of which fall three places to seventh and ninth.

Number one this time last year: Inglourious Basterds































































































































































Pos.FilmWeekend GrossWeekTotal UK Gross
1The Expendables
£3,910,5961£3,910,596
2Salt£2,166,7151





















































£2,166,715
3Toy Story 3£2,095,5405































































£63,810,363
4Pirahna 3D
£1,487,1191































































£1,487,119
5Marmaduke
£1,243,7891











































































£1,243,789
6Inception£1,063,6796£31,563,941
7Knight and Day£825,6923

























































£7,953,038
8The Last Airbender£586,5762















































































£3,310,105
9Step Up 3D£507,9423









































































£6,636,616
10The Sorcerer's Apprentice£439,5272













































































£2,370,535


Incoming...

Brit director Edgar Wright unleashes the comic-book adaptation Scott Pilgrim vs. The World (cert. 12A) this coming Wednesday against competition from Diary of a Wimpy Kid (cert. PG) and will be hoping to better a disappointing fifth place opening in North America. Watch the trailer for Scott Pilgrim vs The World, and check out or review of Diary of a Wimpy Kid.

A number of new releases also arrive on Friday including comedy ensemble Grown Ups (cert. 12A) and Swedish thriller The Girl Who Played With Fire (cert. 15), along with Bollywood dramas Chak Jawana (cert. TBC) and Aashayein (cert. TBC). And of course, if you've been living on Pandora for the past nine months and haven't yet contributed to the global box office haul of $2.7b or dropped twenty-odd quid on the DVD or Blu-ray, there's always the 3D release of Avatar: Special Edition to look forward to, with a whole eight minutes of extra footage!

U.K. Box Office Archive
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Monday, 23 August 2010

British Cinema: Centurion (2010)

Centurion, 2010.

Directed by Neil Marshall.
Starring Michael Fassbender, Dominic West, Olga Kurylenko, Noel Clarke, David Morrissey and Imogen Poots.


SYNOPSIS:

When the legendary Ninth Legion of the Roman army are decimated by a tribe of Pictish warriors, a small band of survivors must fight for survival deep behind enemy lines.


The fourth feature from Geordie director Neil Marshall (The Descent), Centurion is a low-budget historical epic that has been described as "Britain's answer to Gladiator", and while it's easy to draw comparisons with Ridley Scott's Oscar-winning blockbuster, it is fairly safe to assume that the film won't be troubling the Academy members come voting time. That's not to say Centurion is a bad film by any means but story is clearly a secondary concern next to bone-crunching action and blood-soaked gore, which is a shame when you consider the array of acting talent on display. However, as fans of the director's previous work will know, bone-crunching action and blood-soaked gore is what Marshall does best and he is certainly on top of his game with this latest release.

In AD 117, the Roman Empire dominates much of the civilised world but in northern Britain the might of the military has ground to a halt in the face of a new enemy, a savage Celtic tribe known as the Picts. Under the leadership of Gorlacon (Ulrich Thomsen), the Picts are perfecting their guerrilla tactics and eliminating Roman outposts one at a time, much to the displeasure of Agricola (Paul Freeman), the governor of Britannia. After surviving a Pict raid on a frontier garrison, centurion Quintus Dias (Michael Fassbender) is rescued by General Virilus (Dominic West) and his battle-hardened Ninth Legion. Summoned by the governor, Virilus and Quintus are tasked with marching north into Caledonia to kill Gorlacon and eliminate his people.

Accompanied by a Etain (Olga Kurylenko), a mute Pict scout and ferocious warrior, the legion head deep into the harsh terrain of the Scottish Highlands only to be betrayed by their guide. Ambushed by the Picts, General Virilus is taken prisoner and all but a handful of the soldiers are brutally slain. When a failed rescue attempt results in the death of Gorlacon's young son, the Pict chief dispatches Etain and a selection of his most fierce warriors to hunt the soldiers down, with Quintus and his dwindling platoon facing a desperate battle for survival as they look to reach the sanctuary of the Roman frontier.

Running at just 97 minutes, Centurion moves at a frantic pace and there are more than enough intense battle sequences and grisly deaths to satisfy even the most hardcore of viewer. The film might be rated 15 in the UK but don’t let that fool you into thinking the violence is restrained by any stretch of the imagination. While I found the inclusion of some rather iffy CGI-blood to be a tad distracting and unnecessary at times, the majority seemed to be of the old-school practical variety and the red-stuff really does flow by the bucket-load as limbs fly and heads roll at every turn.

Another of the director's strengths is his knack for maximising his budget and delivering a Hollywood-style polish on a fraction of the cost. Made for just £10m, Centurion manages to match the stylish visual flair of its big budget counterparts and cinematographer Sam McCurdy makes excellent use of its picturesque locations, with some fantastic sweeping helicopter shots that would not look out of place in The Lord of the Rings trilogy. Having realised such a polished look for a relatively small cost, it is intriguing to think of what could be achieved with the backing of a major Hollywood studio and it is surely just a matter of time before Marshall tries has hand on the other side of the Atlantic.

Marshall always brings something different to the typical high-profile output of the British film industry Centurion is no exception. For those who have enjoyed his previous work it’s a no-brainer and a fine return to form after the underwhelming Doomsday (2008), and if you’re the type of person who favours hyper-realistic gory action over historical accuracy you're bound to be entertained by the brutal mayhem on offer here.

Gary Collinson

Movie Review Archive
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Saturday, 21 August 2010

Short Film Showcase - Amblin' (1968)

Amblin Steven SpielbergAmblin', 1968.

Written and Directed by Steven Spielberg.
Starring Richard Levin and Pamela McMyler.

While studying at Long Beach state in the 60s, Steven Spielberg was introduced to aspiring producer Dennis Hoffman who provided the young filmmaker with a budget of $15,000 to produce a screenplay Spielberg had written entitled Amblin'. The resulting twenty-six minute short received a theatrical release in 1969 alongside Otto Preminger's Skidoo (1968) and would prove to be his breakthrough, with Spielberg becoming the youngest director to be offered to a long-term deal with a major studio when Universal executive Sid Sheinberg signed him to a seven-year deal.

Dialogue-free for its duration and set during the hippy movement of the 1960s, Amblin' is a romance about a couple of young travellers who meet up and decide to accompany one another on a journey to the Pacific coast. Amblin' demonstrates Spielberg's emerging talents as a visual storyteller and features impressive cinematography from Allen Daviau, who would later collaborate with the director on feature projects including E.T. - The Extra-Terrestrial (1982), The Colour Purple (1985) and Empire of the Sun (1987).

For more on Steven Spielberg, check out Trevor Hogg's in-depth career profile Encountering Spielberg and be sure to vote in our poll for your favourite Steven Spielberg movie.


Embed courtesy of GoogleVideo.

Related:

Five Essential Films of Steven Spielberg
Movies... For Free! Duel (1971)

Click here to view more short films and public domain features.
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Friday, 20 August 2010

Holy Franchise, Batman! Bringing The Caped Crusader to the Screen (Part Three)

Gary Collinson traces the many screen incarnations of The Dark Knight in the third of a three-part feature... read parts one and two.

Batman logoWhile the Batman franchise was enjoying a prolonged spell of creativity and popularity throughout the 80s and 90s, the release of the much-maligned Batman & Robin (1997) looked to have steered the series towards a disastrous conclusion. With the movie franchise in tatters, it was clear that Warner Bros. had lost sight of the character and were in need of a complete overhaul. The next few years would prove difficult for fans with constant and often unsubstantiated rumours as to what direction – if any – the series was headed, along with a number of proposed projects that ultimately failed to get off the ground.

After giving filmmaker Joel Schumacher the green light to start working on a fourth movie during the theatrical run of Batman Forever, Warner Bros. took this one step further when they began developing the next sequel while cameras were still rolling on Batman & Robin. Based on a script from newcomer Mark Protosevich (who had been brought in to replace the departing Akiva Goldsman as scriptwriter) Batman Triumphant would have featured The Scarecrow and Harley Quinn as the primary villains, along with the return of The Joker courtesy of a fear-toxin hallucination. Schumacher, George Clooney and Chris O’Donnell were all slated to return until Batman & Robin sent everything crashing back to the drawing board. Clooney and O’Donnell were out along with Protosevich’s script, while the director's own involvement was hanging by a thread. “The only way I would do another Batfilm was if we went back to the basics,” said the Schumacher of the ‘toyetic’ approach of his previous two efforts. “It would be nice to take the bigger-is-better concept out of it and just go pure.”

A year after the release of Batman & Robin, Schumacher approached Warner Bros. with the idea of adapting Frank Miller’s classic miniseries Batman: Year One, while rumours of Clint Eastwood and Michael Keaton portraying an aging Bruce Wayne in The Dark Knight Returns proved unfounded. However, the studio was giving consideration to an original concept from Lee Shapiro and Stephen Wise entitled Batman: DarKnight. “We pitched an idea to return the story franchise to its dark roots, which they liked,” said Shapiro on the unproduced screenplay, “but what really hooked them was our concept of including the Man-Bat as one of the antagonists.” Adopting a darker approach, DarKnight would have seen The Scarecrow unwittingly unleash the alter-ego of Dr. Kirk Langstrom on Gotham, forcing Bruce Wayne to come out of retirement and clear his name when the creature threatens the city.

While the film department of Warner Bros. were floundering over their next move their small-screen counterparts were busy developing their own take on Gotham’s favourite son. Fresh of the success of The Iron Giant in 1999, scribe Tim McCanlies pitched executives a proposal for a series entitled Bruce Wayne, which would follow the formative years of the young billionaire along with regular supporting characters including Detective James Gordon and best friend Harvey Dent. The WB Network immediately optioned the series and a pilot script and show bible were produced with Trevor Fehrman (Clerks II) and Shawn Ashmore (X-Men) hotly tipped to secure the title role. An internal struggle between Warner’s film and TV divisions soon erupted as the series continued into development and following the impressive box-office returns of X-Men in the summer of 2000, the show was shelved in favour of pushing forward with their feature ambitions. The original premise did survive and would be reworked the following year as Smallville, with the future Dark Knight replaced by the future Man of Steel.

Batman Year OneOpting to pass on Batman: DarKnight in 2000 and with Schumacher finally out as director, the studio’s attention then turned towards adapting the popular animated series Batman Beyond, which had recently made its debut on the WB Network and was proving popular with audiences by supplying a fresh take on the character. Paul Dini and Neal Stephenson were hired to pen a screenplay along with Remember the Titans director Boaz Yakin, but the project was quickly cancelled when the decision was made to concentrate on Year One. The studio’s commitment towards repairing the damage caused by Batman & Robin was evident when they secured the services of the highly rated up-and-coming filmmaker Darren Aronofsky (Requiem for a Dream), who was officially handed the director’s chair in 2000 and immediately delighted fans by bringing in Frank Miller as his co-writer.

“I just think it's a great story that's been told two different ways in the last 10 years, both interesting, but not the way I would tell it,” commented Aronofsky on his vision for The Dark Knight. “It’s somewhat based on Frank Miller’s novel but it’s going to be very different from anything in Year One. Toss out everything you can imagine about Batman! Everything! We’re starting completely anew.” An early script review from Ain't It Cool News seemed to confirm that there would indeed be a number of changes - such as a black Alfred (described as a “jive talkin brotha”), the inclusion of elements of The Killing Joke and The Penguin reimagined as a heroin-smuggling mob boss - and was highly critical of the screenplay as a whole. Progress on Year One seemed to move at a snail’s pace as it sunk into development hell, with actors such as Brendan Fraser, Josh Hartnett, Ben Affleck and Christian Bale allegedly in the frame to don the cape and cowl.

With Batman no closer to a big screen return, the character did manage a handful of television appearances under the guise of Bruce Thomas (Legally Blonde), who starred alongside Michael Gough in a series of General Motors OnStar commercials in 2001 and reprised his role for the pilot and premiere of Birds of Prey the following year. Based upon the DC Comics series of the same name, Birds of Prey is set in a future Gotham where Batman has retired and a female superhero team featuring his daughter The Huntress (Ashley Scott), Barbara Gordon (Dina Meyer) and Black Canary (Rachel Skarsten) are left to continue his legacy. Premiering on the WB Network in October 2002, the live-action TV series enjoyed strong ratings but was cancelled after a run of just thirteen episodes.

Although Warner Bros. were having trouble getting the Batman franchise up and running, the lengthy process was nothing compared to that of their other major DC property Superman. Last seen back in 1987 with its own franchise-killer Superman IV: The Quest for Peace, the Man of Steel had since passed through the hands of a host of writers and directors including Kevin Smith, Tim Burton, J. J. Abrams and McG. The two superheroes’ paths would collide in 2001 when Se7en screenwriter Andrew Kevin Walker pitched an idea for Batman vs. Superman courtesy of director Wolfgang Petersen, with an impressed Warner Bros. then abandoning Year One as a result. Serving as a reboot to both franchises, the script for Batman vs. Superman was rewritten by Akiva Goldsman and just about every major young actor was suggested for the leads. Offers were made to Christian Bale and Josh Hartnett to portray Batman and Superman respectively, although project soon met the same fate as its predecessors when Petersen left to direct Troy (2004).

Frustrations continued in late 2002 when the studio rejected a pitch by Joss Whedon. “In my version, there was actually a new [villain], it wasn’t one of the classics,” said the Buffy the Vampire Slayer creator on his idea for a new origin story. “It was more of a 'Hannibal Lecter' type. He was somebody already in Arkham Asylum that Bruce went and sort of studied with.” While the concept failed to ignite the interest of studio executives, Whedon still has ambitions of realising it in one form or another. “I get very emotional about it, I still love the story. Maybe I’ll get to do it as a comic one day.”

CatwomanStruggling to find a suitable way to reboot the main Batman franchise, Warners chose to test the water with a spin-off featuring one of the most popular villains of the Rogue’s Gallery. Based on a screenplay by Daniel Waters (Batman Returns) that had been circling since 1995, Catwoman had passed through the hands of no fewer than twenty-eight writers before moving into production in 2003. With Michelle Pfeiffer opting not to return as Selina Kyle, the decision was made to go with a completely new character and sever all ties to earlier Batman films. Despite the presence of Oscar-winning actress Halle Berry in the lead role as Patience Phillips / Catwoman, the $100m film proved to be an unmitigated disaster and was universally slated upon release in 2004, putting up a strong challenge to Batman & Robin as the worst superhero film ever made. Berry personally accepted a Razzie Award for Worst Actress – thanking the studio “for putting me in this piece of shit, God-awful movie” – while it was also 'successful' in the Worst Screenplay, Worst Director (Pitof) and Worst Picture categories.

“All I can say is that I grew up with Batman, I've been fascinated by him and I'm excited to contribute to the lore surrounding the character," said Memento director Christopher Nolan when he was officially unveiled as the man to oversee the rebirth of the Batman franchise in January 2003. Nolan had recently completed his third feature Insomnia (2002) for Warner Bros. and impressed executives with his vision for a complete overhaul of the series. He was soon joined by screenwriter David S. Goyer (Blade) and the pair set about to develop a script that would explore the origins of the character, drawing inspiration from comic-book storylines The Man Who Falls, Year One and The Long Halloween. Nolan was also clear on how he intended to differentiate the new film from previous instalments: “The world of Batman is that of grounded reality. Ours will be a recognizable, contemporary reality against which an extraordinary heroic figure arises.”

Batman Begins Christian BaleHaving been under consideration for the role of The Dark Knight since Darren Aronofsky was attached to adapt Year One, British actor Christian Bale was officially announced as the next Batman in September 2003, putting an end to speculation that had linked the likes of David Boreanaz, Billy Cudrup, Jake Gyllenhaal, Joshua Jackson and Cillian Murphy to the role. “Christopher Reeve became the defining Superman, but I don't feel that has ever happened with Batman,” said Bale, who had to undertake an intense training schedule to prepare for the physically demanding role after losing over 60lbs for his previous film The Machinist (2004). “I felt like this was an opportunity to do that in regard to the way that Bob Kane originally intended it - a dark and terrifying and intimidating character.”

With Bale secured as Batman, Nolan then went about assembling a strong supporting cast including Michael Caine (Alfred), Gary Oldman (Sgt. James Gordon), Katie Holmes (Rachel Dawes), Morgan Freeman (Lucius Fox) Liam Neeson (Henri Ducard / Ra’s al Ghul), Tom Wilkinson (Carmine Falcone) and Cillian Murphy (Dr. Jonathan Crane / The Scarecrow). Filming commenced in March 2004 with the majority of the shoot taking place in England's Shepperton Studios and locations such as London’s National Institute for Medical Research, University College London and Mentmore Towers in Buckinghamshire (Iceland’s Vatnajökull glacier was used to recreate the exterior shots of Ra’s al Ghul’s temple while the police pursuit of the Batmobile was filmed in Chicago).

After an abundance of failed projects and an eight year absence, The Caped Crusader finally returned to cinemas when the $150m-budgeted Batman Begins was released on June 15th, 2005. It took first place in North America with an opening weekend of $48.7m and went on to accumulate $372m world-wide, positioning it as the second-highest grossing installment in the franchise behind Tim Burton’s 1989 effort. The film also enjoyed critical acclaim and industry recognition, picking up an Oscar nomination for Best Cinematography (Nolan regular Wally Pfister), three BAFTA nominations, three Saturn Awards (Best Fantasy Film, Best Actor and Best Writing) and an MTV Movie Award for Best Hero, although Katie Holmes’ performance came in for criticism and she was nominated for a Razzie Award for Worst Supporting Actress.

The BatmanAt the same time as Batman Begins was gearing up for release, Warner Bros. were also looking to bring the character back to the small screen with a new Saturday morning animation that would cater to the younger viewer. Utilising character designs from Jeff Matsuda (Jackie Chan Adventures) and set in its own continuity, The Batman debuted in September 2004 and focussed on a young Batman (voiced by Rino Romano) as he fights to protect Gotham from a slew of familiar - and often reimagined - faces. As with the earlier Batman: The Animated Series, the show featured a host of notable voice actors including Mitch Peliggi (Commissioner Gordon), Robert Patrick (Hawkman), Gina Gershon (Catwoman), Ron Perlman (Bane / Killer Croc), Robert Englund (The Riddler), Louis Gossett, Jr. (Lucius Fox), Jerry O'Connell (Nightwing), Mark Hamill (Tony Zucco) and Clancy Brown (Lex Luthor). Although it came under fire from some quarters for deviating too far from the established Batman mythos, the show won six Emmy Awards and an Annie Award during its five season run, and also spawned a direct-to-video feature in 2005 entitled The Batman vs. Dracula.

Ending Batman Begins with a tease towards the introduction of The Clown Prince of Crime, Christopher Nolan took time out from the franchise to helm the Victorian-era mystery The Prestige (2006) before a follow-up was officially announced on July 31st, 2006. Budgeted at $185m, The Dark Knight was to be the first entry in the franchise not to have Batman in the title and would see The Caped Crusader teaming up with Jim Gordon and Harvey Dent to bring down his arch-nemesis The Joker. Working from a treatment by David S. Goyer that was inspired by The Long Halloween, Nolan and his younger brother and co-writer Jonathan sat down to develop a screenplay that would push the boundaries of the superhero genre. “To me, The Joker is an absolute”, said the director on his decision not to explore the origin of Batman’s most popular villain. “We wanted him to be absolutely threatening in what he represents as a force of anarchy and chaos. That’s really the reason for Harvey Dent's prominence in the film. It's his story that has to provide the emotional backbone of the film.”

The Dark Knight JokerWith the likes of Paul Bettany, Adrian Brody and Robin Williams expressing interest in the role of The Joker, Nolan made a surprising casting choice when he turned to Heath Ledger (Brokeback Mountain), who based his portrayal on a combination of Sex Pistols bassist Sid Vicious and A Clockwork Orange’s Alex DeLarge. Meanwhile the crucial part of district attorney Harvey Dent / Two-Face went to Aaron Eckhart (Thank You For Smoking) against competition from Mark Ruffalo and Hugh Jackman, with Maggie Gyllenhaal replacing the outgoing Katie Holmes as love interest Rachel Dawes. Rounding out the supporting cast were the likes of Eric Roberts (Sal Maroni), Anthony Michael Hall (Mike Engel) and Michael Jai White (Gambol), joining returning players Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman and Gary Oldman (along with Cillian Murphy, who would cameo once again as The Scarecrow).

Principal photography on The Dark Knight got underway in April 2007 with Nolan opting to return to Chicago for thirteen weeks of filming before moving on to England and Hong Kong, with Nolan and cinematographer Wally Pfister frustrated by restrictions imposed by the Chinese government and pressure from environmentalists. Meanwhile filming at London’s Battersea Power Station prompted emergency calls by local residents who feared a terrorist attack on the station. The production was also marred by tragedy when technician Conway Wickliffe was killed preparing a stunt in September 2007 and star Heath Ledger died of an accidental overdose during post-production in January 2008. "It was tremendously emotional, right when he passed, having to go back in and look at him every day," reflected Nolan on the challenge of completing the editing process after the actor’s untimely passing. “The truth is, the performance is so iconic. It's so not Heath Ledger; it is The Joker. He just inhabits it. It's riveting to watch this incredible performance.”

Released in North America on July 18th 2008, The Dark Knight exceeded its already lofty expectations and immediately entered the record books with a midnight opening of $18.5m before overtaking Spider-Man 3’s weekend record with a total of $158.4m. It became the second film to ever break the $500m mark in the US and only the fourth to reach the a billion dollars world-wide with a total box office gross of $1,001,921,825. Garnering near-universal praise from audiences and critics alike, The Dark Knight appeared on numerous top ten lists of the year and was nominated for eight Academy Awards in total, breaking the record of most nominations for a movie based on a comic-book or graphic novel that was previously held by Dick Tracy (1990). Acclaim was particularly high for Heath Ledger who received a slew of posthumous accolades including the Academy Award, Golden Globe Award, BAFTA Award and Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Supporting Actor, while the film also took home the Oscar for Best Sound Editing.

Batman Gotham KnightTo coincide with The Dark Knight in 2008, Warner Bros. produced an animated anthology film set between the two Nolan features entitled Batman: Gotham Knight as part of their DC Universe Animated Original Movies line. Featuring six short stories (including one from Batman Begins scribe David S. Goyer) and heavily influenced by the Japanese anime style, Gotham Knight was notable for the return of Batman: The Animated Series star Kevin Conroy as the voice of The Dark Knight. Conroy would go on to reprise his role in the direct-to-video features Superman/Batman: Public Enemies (2009) and its upcoming sequel Superman/Batman: Apocalypse (2010), while the character also appears in two Justice League animated features, voiced by Jeremy Sisto in Justice League: The New Frontier (2008) and William Baldwin in Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths (2010). Batman continues to be an integral part of the DC Universe Animated Original Movies series with Bruce Greenwood donning the cowl for Batman: Under the Red Hood (2010) and an adaptation of Frank Miller's Batman: Year One slated for release in 2011.

During pre-production of The Dark Knight, Warner Bros. announced plans to bring DC Comics iconic superhero ensemble Justice League to the screen with George Miller (Mad Max) hired to direct in September 2007. Budgeted at around $220m and based on a script by Kieran and Michele Mulroney, Warner Bros. secured a cast that included Armie Hammer (Desperate Housewives) as Batman, D. J. Cotrona (Windfall) as Superman and Adam Brody (The OC) as The Flash, with plans to produce the film using motion capture technology. Justice League: Mortal was delayed due to the Writers Guild of America strike and was continously put back amid rumours that Miller had left the project. By August 2008 Warner Bros. allowed options on the cast to expire and Miller went on to develop other projects with the Justice League feature currently on hold.

Batman The Brave and the BoldAlthough The Batman finished its run in 2008, The Caped Crusader continues to enjoy animated adventures on the small-screen through the Cartoon Network series Batman: The Brave and the Bold. Debuting in November 2008, The Brave and the Bold is inspired by the DC Comics' series of the same name and is made up of standalone episodes that see Batman teaming up with fellow superheroes such as Plastic Man, Aquaman and Green Arrow to solve crimes and combat his foes. Diedrich Bader takes over voice duties as Batman, while the show has included a number of notable guest stars from earlier incarnations of the franchise such as Clancy Brown, Mark Hamill, Julie Newmar, Ron Perlman and Adam West. At the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con it was announced that The Brave and the Bold would finish its run in 2010 after three seasons with the producers planning to replace the show with a new, darker take on the character. Meanwhile Bruce Greenwood will also voice Batman as a supporting character in a new Cartoon Network series entitled Young Justice, which is set to premiere in November 2010 and centres on a team of teenage sidekicks as they look to make the transition to fully fledged superheroes.

"My brother is working on the screenplay," said Christopher Nolan in June 2010 with regards to his plans for a follow up to The Dark Knight. "We came up with a story that we are very excited about. We particularly like where we are taking the characters and what the ending is." With the third installment of his hugely successful Batman series set for release in July 2012, Warner Bros. have also signed a deal with the British filmmaker to act as 'godfather' to their Superman reboot. Nolan will serve as producer on The Man of Steel with co-writers David S. Goyer and Jonathan Nolan reportedly candidates for directorial duties, although the prospects of a superhero team-up seem slim while Nolan remains in control: "They're two very different characters, but there's an elemental feeling of power in the iconography of those characters. To me that's originally because they stood alone. I need to hang on to that in my imagining of them."

Since Lewis Wilson made history as the first screen incarnation of The Caped Crusader back in 1943, Batman has spawned a host of television and direct-to-video releases in addition to eight theatrical features with global box office receipts in excess of $2.6 billion. It is one of the most popular franchises of all-time and with Nolan's third Batman feature set to arrive in 2012 - along with two new animated shows and further DC Universe Animated Original Movies - there seems no end in sight for The Dark Knight and his war on the criminal element of Gotham City.

Check out Theatre of the Mind, Trevor Hogg's in-depth profile on the career of director Christopher Nolan for more on the making of Batman Begins and The Dark Knight.

For more on Batman, be sure to head over to TheBatmanUniverse.

Related:

Short Film Showcase - Batman: Dead End (2003)
Short Film Showcase - Batman: City of Scars (2010)

Gary Collinson
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