Iron Man 2, 2010.
Directed by Jon Favreau.
Starring Robert Downey Jr, Sam Rockwell, Mickey Rourke and Scarlett Johansson.
SYNOPSIS:
An unmasked Tony Stark is pressured to relinquish the 'Iron Man weapon' to the US government, while Sam Rockwell's Justin Hammer is developing rival weaponry. Ivan Vanko (Mickey Rourke) aka Whiplash arrives on the scene to battle Iron Man, teaming up with Hammer in the process.
The first Iron Man film was a rip-roaring, swaggering blockbuster, marking the first significant success for a newly independent Marvel Studios and setting the standard for its sequels. This follow-up begins with vodka-swilling Ivan Vanko's father dying, passing on both his knowledge and his ‘explained-later-on-hatred’ of Tony Stark. Ivan proceeds through montage number one to make his own core/suit/weapon thing. (Wait, wasn't Dolph Lundgren's Russian character in Rocky 4 called Ivan Drago? Some unimaginative Russian stereotype names knocking round Hollywood methinks...)
We then cut to Robert Downey Jr. having a riot playing Tony Stark, flying down from a plane to his opening speech at his own 'Stark Expo', backed by scantily clad dancers and the sounds of AC/DC. Its here that we can see why the first Iron Man really worked - Downey Jr. He slides into Stark's shoes with such smug likeability that (as is frequently the case) the whole feature is anchored around him. A hilarious scene later on features him at his own birthday party, drunk and dancing around in the Iron Man suit, blowing up wine bottles and watermelons as they are tossed into the air by adoring female fans. Tony Stark is little more than a boy with too many expensive toys, but Downey Jr. gives him real likeability, imbuing the character with razor sharp wit but many deeper emotional layers too. His performance alone is worth the two hours of your attention.
In fact all the acting is top notch, Scarlett Johansson sizzles as Stark's mysterious new secretary with ulterior motives, the ever-fantastic Sam Rockwell sleazes away as Tony's rival Justin Hammer and Samuel L. Jackson is on suitably entertaining form as Nick Fury. Even director Jon Favreau is enjoying himself with a much larger acting part than in the first film. Rourke, a newly re-crowned acting powerhouse after The Wrestler, is wonderfully menacing here, covered in gang tattoos and spitting out dialogue in a thick, convincing Russian accent.
One criticism I have to bring up is that there’s a bit of a cold-war sensibility to Rourke's character, the Russian murderous genius to Downey Jr's 'peace through weaponry' American hero. There’s a abundance of American flag waving and imagery associated with Iron Man throughout and when we later learn that Rourke's character was incarcerated for selling plutonium to Afghanistan you start to feel like you're being slapped in the face with the metaphor. I understand that in the comics Ivan Vanko was Russian but the stereotypes are glaring, and Stark's constant references to world peace start to take on a slightly sinister air of realism, with Iron Man standing in for the real US Government's nasty habit of literally 'policing' the world.
The main problem most blockbusters have today (or in the case of the Transformers franchise, one problem of many), is that the action scenes are so heavily reliant on gratuitous levels of CG effects, that you can get completely swept away into a kind of CG Information Overload. Watching Transformers 2 in IMAX for example was the visual equivalent of taking too much acid and going to Alton Towers - unpleasantly queasy at best. Iron Man 2 does slip into this undesirable realm, but only really in one scene, the rest of the action scenes (particularly the excellent F1 race at Monaco) are crisp and well shot, and the fight scene between Iron Man and War Machine has a fun, slapstick edge to it.
After all, Iron Man 2 is a popcorn sequel if ever there was one. That’s no criticism, it truly revels in itself as entertainment. The characters gleefully smirk and bounce off each other, the script is great and the action is married to the AC/DC soundtrack seamlessly. For sheer straight up, simple, on-the-surface entertainment, this leads the pack so far this year.
Roger Holland
Friday, April 30, 2010
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Commando remake in the pipeline
The never-ending stream of Hollywood unoriginality continues today with alarming news that studio 20th Century Fox are reported to be prepping a remake of the classic 80s actioner Commando, which of course starred Arnold Schwarzenegger as the ultimate one man army, Colonel John Matrix.
David Ayer is signed to write and direct the remake and while he certainly has the pedigree - his CV includes screenwriting duties on Training Day (2001), S.W.A.T. (2003) and Harsh Times (2005), which he also helmed - one has to question the sensibility in such a move. Why not just use the basic plot - ex-special forces machine's daughter get's kidnapped, shit hits the fan big time - and inject a trickle of creativity? Surely the title doesn't hold that much name recognition with the general movie-going public, while fans of the original are bound to boycott this like the plague.
I know I will.
And is there really anyone out there who could pull off a convincing Matrix? If it's Channing Tatum we riot. As Matrix himself would say, "bullshit!"
Forget about this travesty and read my thoughts on the original here.
David Ayer is signed to write and direct the remake and while he certainly has the pedigree - his CV includes screenwriting duties on Training Day (2001), S.W.A.T. (2003) and Harsh Times (2005), which he also helmed - one has to question the sensibility in such a move. Why not just use the basic plot - ex-special forces machine's daughter get's kidnapped, shit hits the fan big time - and inject a trickle of creativity? Surely the title doesn't hold that much name recognition with the general movie-going public, while fans of the original are bound to boycott this like the plague.
I know I will.
And is there really anyone out there who could pull off a convincing Matrix? If it's Channing Tatum we riot. As Matrix himself would say, "bullshit!"
Forget about this travesty and read my thoughts on the original here.
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Hard to Replicate: A Ridley Scott Profile (Part 2)
Trevor Hogg profiles the career of filmmaker Ridley Scott in the second of a five part feature... read part one.
Influenced by 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), Dark Star (1974), and Star Wars (1977), British filmmaker Ridley Scott set about designing a science fiction tale called Alien (1979). Nostromo, a commercial-towing spaceship, intercepts a transmission from a derelict vessel. Given corporate orders to investigate, the crew finds itself hunted by a vicious alien life-form. “I was looking for something like 2001 not the fantasy of Star Wars. I wanted a slow-moving, massive piece of steel which was moving along in deep, silent space. We ended up adding sound because the footage couldn’t stand on its own.” Scott wanted to emulate the 1968 classic for another reason. “[Stanley] Kubrick was fantastic in the way he gave us that nothingness [a timeless future],” explained the director, “especially with the costumes. He didn’t have zippers all over the place, or satin fourteen-tone jerkins. The suits they wore looked vaguely different, but not all that different from today.”
“I think the crew members of the Nostromo seem spirited only because of their argumentative nature,” observed Scott, “which is due to the fact they can no longer stand the sight of each other.” Casting the picture, scripted by Dan O’Bannon (Total Recall) and Roland Shusett (Freejack), required the South Shields-native to adopt an unusual tactic. “I knew I wasn’t going to get much from having actors come in and read,” remarked Ridley Scott, “because Alien isn’t the type of film where there are going to be prolonged speeches. Here the dialogue was so abbreviated and staccato that it wouldn’t be fair. So I researched the actors who were being considered by seeing their films. Once we narrowed the list down, I had the actors come in for a meeting. I tend to cast my actors as a group, getting a physical balance between their types.”
To help Sigourney Weaver (Working Girl), Tom Skerritt (Contact), Veronica Cartwright (Barry Dingle), Harry Dean Stanton (The Green Mile), John Hurt (The Elephant Man), Ian Holm (Chariots of Fire), and Yaphet Kotto (Brubaker) with their performances, Scott constructed a past for them. “What I usually do, even if it’s only for my own peace of mind, is draft a short bio of each character and give it to the actors before I go to work with them,” said the moviemaker. “The bios did help, because they immediately started the actors thinking about their characters.” The performers embraced the idea. “We had about five days of continuous discussion in my office with the seven actors of the original cast, which at the time included Jon Finch [Death on the Nile] instead of John Hurt. In that time we pretty well managed to iron out and agree on the various characterizations, and managed to get some satisfactory reads out of the script.”
“‘If you have women up there, how come there’s no love interest?’ It’s a pity that the one scene we had in the screenplay that had sex in it had to be cut,” revealed Ridley Scott. “It showed that you can’t afford to have love affairs in deep space. If you do, you immediately have two groups aboard, the pair who are in love and the rest of the crew. That’s the beginning of problems unless you are a space pioneer and settle down with your family.” A far more serious and lethal threat appears in the story. “What gave us the cocoon concept was that insects will utilize others’ bodies to be the host of their eggs. That’s how the alien would use Dallas (Skerritt) and each of the crew members it kills. This explains why the alien doesn’t kill everyone at once, but rather kills them off one by one; it wants to use each person as a separate host each time it has new eggs.”
Introducing the title character required going beyond normal horror genre conventions. “We wanted to do something so outrageous that no one would know it was coming,” said Ridley Scott. “It’s not a door being wrenched open with the monster behind it, or the monster coming roaring through some metal sheeting or grabbing somebody from behind.” The end result was the notorious chest-burster scene. “We had to make a living creature spring out of a man’s chest and keep it from being hokey. Well, we did it, and that’s why it’s so staggering. From a technical point of view I think we worried more about it than any other effect in the film. If we hadn’t gotten it right, we might as well have forgotten the whole thing.” The sequence accomplished what Scott had hoped to achieve. “The film took on a more serious identity.”
“The original concept was constructed around the notion of Ten Little Indians [1965]. In the planning and writing stages there were to be seven major sequences, one of which was the chest-burster,” recalled Ridley Scott. “As the script was reworked, and as we shot the film, however, other sequences that were equally powerful, such as the airlock depressurization, the flamethrower death of Parker [Yaphet Kotto] and Lambert [Veronica Cartwright], and the cocoon scene with Dallas [Tom Skerritt] were cut altogether or changed.” The design of the alien was revised numerous times. “We had gone through various sketches in the preproduction phase, and I’d seen drawings that other people had tried as well. They always seemed to be of scaly bodies with claws or huge blobs that would move across the floor. There was no elegance to them, no lethalness. What emerged was an H.R. Giger-designed humanoid with distinctly biomechanoid tendencies.”
“The sets were difficult,” confided the filmmaker, “because I wanted to create an oppressive, claustrophobic atmosphere of low ceilings.” Adding further to the onscreen tension are the sound effects, such as the opening and closing of the iris-type cutoffs in the airshaft sequence. “The idea was to make you feel uneasy. We tried to use something that reminded you of a guillotine, something that wasn’t pleasant so maybe you’d start thinking, ‘Is the beast coming this way?’” The camerawork assisted in setting the tone for the picture. “If you ever analyze a shot, everything is always slightly moving. It’s never still, which I think makes the audience slightly uneasy.” There is one thing which Scott regrets about the film. “There were no speculative scenes or discussions about what the alien was…I believe audiences love those, especially if they’re well done. They give the threat much more weight.”
“With Alien we had big arguments over the last three reels of the film. Some people felt they were just too much,” said Ridley Scott. “I know it’s never too much, not when you get the proper balance. You’ve got to keep topping yourself. So if you start at a level that’s already pretty heated, you’ve got to keep going and going. That is the nature of this film.” The reaction at the Dallas, Texas screening left film editor Terry Rawlings (Entrapment) stunned, “It was the most incredible preview I’ve ever attended. I mean, people were screaming and running out of the theatre.” Audiences flocked to see the science fiction-horror picture causing the $11 million production to gross $105 million worldwide, thereby, turning unknown Broadway actress Sigourney Weaver into a female action-hero star.
Alien won the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects; it was introduced into the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress in 2002, and the American Film Institute listed the picture 7th on the Top 10 Sci-Fi Films of All-Time in 2008. Three sequels were subsequently released, Aliens (1986), Alien³ (1992), and Alien Resurrection (1997); for film critic Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times, they do not compare to the original version, “The 1979 Alien is a much more cerebral movie than its sequels, with the characters (and the audience) genuinely engaged in curiosity about this weirdest of life-forms…Unfortunately, the films it influenced studied its thrills but not its thinking.”
For seven months Ridley Scott developed a science fiction classic by author Frank Herbert for the big screen. “Dune was going to take a lot more work. And I didn’t have the heart to attack that work,” confessed the filmmaker of the picture which was released in 1984 under the direction of David Lynch (Blue Velvet). “I felt I couldn’t sit around for another two and a half years on Dune, which is how long I thought it was going to take...I needed immediate activity, needed to get my mind off my [older] brother’s death. So I went to Dino [DeLaurentiis to tell him] I had to depart Dune and that the script was his.”
Not leaving behind the science fiction genre, Ridley Scott shifted his attention to Dangerous Days, an adaptation of Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by novelist Philip K. Dick. “In the book, he’s [Rick Deckard] a bit of a renegade, a freelancer, with a bonus for each job,” stated the director. “But in the film he’s part of bureaucracy. We thought it would be nice to see this character gradually emerge as a very efficient exterminator who is almost Kafkaesque.”
Rick Deckard is dispatched by the government police force to hunt and eliminate a group of androids called replicants who have illegally come to earth. As the story evolved with screenwriter Hampton Fancher (The Minus Man), Scott came to a conclusion, “I finally said to Hampton, ‘You know, we can’t keep calling Deckard a goddamn detective.’ And he said, ‘Why not?’ I replied, ‘Because we’re telling a story in 2019 for Christ’s sake. The word ‘detective’ will probably be around then, but this job Deckard does killing androids, that requires something new. We’ve got to come up with a bloody name for his profession.’” Fancher’s solution was to use the title Blade Runner: A Movie from a book written by William Burroughs. The rights to the title were subsequently purchased for a nominal fee. “I thought the words ‘Blade Runner’ very well suited our needs,” approved Scott. “It was a nice, threatening name that neatly described a violent action.”
“Sci-fi presents a wonderful opportunity, because if you get it right, anything goes,” observed the filmmaker. “But you’d better have drawn up your rule book for the world you’ve created first. Then you’d better stick to it.” A critical decision was made in regards to the futuristic tale. “We drew a line [in the screenplay development]. We wouldn’t explore the laboratory details, the genetic explanations. Instead we asked, ‘What if large combines in the next few decades became almost as powerful as the government?’ Which is possible. They’d move into all sorts of industries – arms, chemicals, aerospace – and eventually they’d go into genetics.”
Describing the environment of Blade Runner (1982), which takes place in the Los Angeles of 2019, Scott remarked, “Our vision was really of a clogged world, where you get a sense of a city on overload, where things may stop at any time. Services may give out – in fact, they already have ceased in at least some parts of the city. Everything is old or badly serviced, and the bureaucratic system running the city is totally disorganized.” Selected to play the main character of Rick Deckard was Harrison Ford (Witness) who performs alongside Rutger Hauer (Ladyhawke), Sean Young (No Way Out), Daryl Hannah (Splash), Edward James Olmos (Stand and Deliver), M. Emmet Walsh (Blood Simple), William Sanderson (Coal Miner’s Daughter), and Joanna Cassidy (Under Fire). “Batty’s [Hauer] death scene is in a way the final demonstration of his superiority over Deckard [Ford],” said the moviemaker. “He could have taken Deckard’s life – Deckard had just killed Pris [Hannah] – but decided as a gift to let him live. The white pigeon that he sets free into the sky is, of course, a symbol of peace and life.”
In the July 24, 1980 draft of the script by Hampton Fancher there is a sixth escaped replicant. “The woman is pretty, a touch of grey in her hair, kind and blue-eyed. Mary looks like an American dream mom, right out of Father Knows Best.” Cast to play the part was Stacey Nelkin (Bullets Over Broadway) who was subsequently devastated to learn that the role had been eliminated due to financial reasons. “I still feel a bit badly about that,” confessed Ridley Scott. “Mary was going to be the only replicant that the audience would have gotten to see naturally fade away. What we’d come up with was a situation that took place early on in the film. In a dark room, with the other replicants watching, Mary dies. That’s how we were going to introduce the replicants.”
For Fancher and co-screenwriter David Webb Peoples (Unforgiven), the idea of Rick Deckard being a replicant was a result of their work being misinterpreted by Ridley Scott; their intention was to invoke empathy by emphasizing the similarities between humans and the artificial creations through the main character. In reference to the dream sequence featured in the Director’s Cut, Scott said, “I’d predetermined that the unicorn scene would be the strongest clue that Deckard, this hunter of replicants, might actually be an artificial human himself.” Harrison Ford disagreed with his director on the origins of the government-sponsored assassin. “[Ridley] wanted the audience to find out that Deckard was a replicant,” stated Ford. “I fought that because I felt that the audience needed somebody to cheer for.”
Ford’s misgivings were well-founded as the picture was a commercial flop, earning $33 million worldwide while costing $28 million to make. “Blade Runner taught me that the American public tends to favour a high-fiber diet which infers that the American system is one containing a certain degree of optimism,” stated Ridley Scott. “I, on the other hand, tend to be a bit darker…Not because I’m a manic-depressive, but because I find darkness more interesting.”
Blade Runner was nominated for Best Art Direction-Set Direction and Best Visual Effects at the Oscars; while the BAFTAs saw the picture win Best Cinematography, Best Costume Design, Best Production Design-Art Direction as well as receive nominations for Best Editing, Best Make Up Artist, Best Score, Best Sound, and Best Special Visual Effects.
After the failure of its theatrical screening, Blade Runner experienced a rebirth in the home video marketplace, causing the American Film Institute to list the picture 6th on its Top 10 Sci-Fi Films of All-Time in 2008. “Blade Runner works on a level which I haven’t seen much – or ever – in a mainstream film,” declared Scott. “It works like a book. Like a very dark novel, which I like. It’s definitely a film that’s designed not to have the usual crush-wallop-bang! impact.” The director added, “I think Blade Runner is a good lesson for all serious filmmakers to ‘stand by your guns.’ Don’t listen to acclaim or criticism. Simply carry on. Hopefully, you’ll do some worthwhile work which stands the test of time.”
Though he had established himself as a feature film director, Ridley Scott produced his most celebrated commercial in 1984. The sixty second spot introduced Apple Computer’s Macintosh personal computer and it was only aired once during the third quarter of Super Bowl XVIII. Borrowing the name as well as inspiration from George Orwell’s classic novel 1984, Scott created a dystopian tale starring a nameless athletic heroine (Anya Major) who carries a large brass-headed hammer while chased by four agents of the Thought Police; she breaks into a private assembly and tosses her weapon at a large screen image of a Big Brother figure (David Graham), thereby shattering the picture in a blaze of light and smoke. “One of the problems was to find a girl who could throw a hammer and look business-like,” remarked Scott. The ad was so successful that in 1999 TV Guide called it the “Number One Greatest Commercial of All-Time” and in 2007, 1984 was named the best Super Bowl spot in the game’s forty-year history.
Not wanting his next project to be “profoundly European”, Ridley Scott contacted the American author responsible for Angel Heart and Gray Matters about writing a screenplay centred around “a young hermit [Tom Cruise] who becomes a hero when he battles the evil Lord of Darkness [Tim Curry], rescues a beautiful princess [Mia Sara] and frees the world from its icy winter curse.”
“The characters really came from left field,” recollected novelist turned screenwriter William Hjortsberg. “We discussed the hero in many forms before deciding on Jack O’ The Green [Cruise]. Then Ridley decided we should have a quest. He also wanted unicorns and thought there should be magic armor and a sword. I came up with the idea of having the world plunged into the wintry darkness. So we had all these elements which had to be woven into a story.” In describing Legend (1985), Ridley Scott stated, “It is not a film of the future, or of the past. It is not even a story of now. The conflict between darkness and light has been with us since creation…and will remain with us through eternity.”
To devise the villain of the story, the director turned to a picture he saw during his childhood. “The beast in [Jean] Cocteau [version of Beauty and the Beast] is never horrible. When I was a kid, the beginning of the movie made me very afraid, but very soon you realize there is something else. I wanted that with Darkness. I didn’t want to put a barrier between the audience and him…I wanted Darkness to be healthy, not disgusting psychologically and physically, because I had a feeling that Evil treats itself better, more often than not, than Good.” For the part of Darkness, Scott considered casting Peter O’Toole (Lawrence of Arabia) whom he concluded lacked the right physique for the role; he then set his sights on hiring Tim Curry who had garnered acclaim for his performance in The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975). “I like the control he has over himself,” remarked Scott on his reason for selecting Curry. “He is very physical and powerful, theatrically speaking. He knows when he needs to stop. It was great to work with him.”
“What I am trying to do, even if I start with a complicated story, is to bring it back to its primitive linearity”, revealed Ridley Scott. “In fairy tales there is always an element of the nightmare.” Fifteen hundred icicles were added to the set varying from one foot to eight feet; they were made from resin and hot wax. Just two days before finishing the principle photography, a fire broke out on the famous 007 sound stage at Pinewood Studios, destroying the forest set. The art department had to rebuild the section of the forest which was needed to complete the filming at a separate location.
“It was a huge risk,” admitted Ridley Scott. “Did I think that the film worked? Absolutely I thought the film worked. Did people get it? Again, no, they didn’t, even though there was an enormous amount of absolutely brilliant work in it.” Part of the story confusion for moviegoers may have resulted from the American theatrical version being severely shortened. Legend proved to be an even bigger worldwide box office disappointment than Blade Runner had been as the movie earned half of its $30 million production budget.
Venturing into new cinematic territory, the British director selected a contemporary thriller as his next project.
Continue to Part 3
For more on Ridley Scott visit RSA Films, or check out Ridley Scott's Legend FAQ and Paul M. Sammon's Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner.
Five Essential Films of Ridley Scott
DVD Giveaway - Blade Runner: The Final Cut
The profile has also been republished as part of the Ridley Scott blogathon at Seeti Maar - Diary of a Movie Lover.
Apple Macintosh 1984 Superbowl Commercial:
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
Influenced by 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), Dark Star (1974), and Star Wars (1977), British filmmaker Ridley Scott set about designing a science fiction tale called Alien (1979). Nostromo, a commercial-towing spaceship, intercepts a transmission from a derelict vessel. Given corporate orders to investigate, the crew finds itself hunted by a vicious alien life-form. “I was looking for something like 2001 not the fantasy of Star Wars. I wanted a slow-moving, massive piece of steel which was moving along in deep, silent space. We ended up adding sound because the footage couldn’t stand on its own.” Scott wanted to emulate the 1968 classic for another reason. “[Stanley] Kubrick was fantastic in the way he gave us that nothingness [a timeless future],” explained the director, “especially with the costumes. He didn’t have zippers all over the place, or satin fourteen-tone jerkins. The suits they wore looked vaguely different, but not all that different from today.”
“I think the crew members of the Nostromo seem spirited only because of their argumentative nature,” observed Scott, “which is due to the fact they can no longer stand the sight of each other.” Casting the picture, scripted by Dan O’Bannon (Total Recall) and Roland Shusett (Freejack), required the South Shields-native to adopt an unusual tactic. “I knew I wasn’t going to get much from having actors come in and read,” remarked Ridley Scott, “because Alien isn’t the type of film where there are going to be prolonged speeches. Here the dialogue was so abbreviated and staccato that it wouldn’t be fair. So I researched the actors who were being considered by seeing their films. Once we narrowed the list down, I had the actors come in for a meeting. I tend to cast my actors as a group, getting a physical balance between their types.”
To help Sigourney Weaver (Working Girl), Tom Skerritt (Contact), Veronica Cartwright (Barry Dingle), Harry Dean Stanton (The Green Mile), John Hurt (The Elephant Man), Ian Holm (Chariots of Fire), and Yaphet Kotto (Brubaker) with their performances, Scott constructed a past for them. “What I usually do, even if it’s only for my own peace of mind, is draft a short bio of each character and give it to the actors before I go to work with them,” said the moviemaker. “The bios did help, because they immediately started the actors thinking about their characters.” The performers embraced the idea. “We had about five days of continuous discussion in my office with the seven actors of the original cast, which at the time included Jon Finch [Death on the Nile] instead of John Hurt. In that time we pretty well managed to iron out and agree on the various characterizations, and managed to get some satisfactory reads out of the script.”
“‘If you have women up there, how come there’s no love interest?’ It’s a pity that the one scene we had in the screenplay that had sex in it had to be cut,” revealed Ridley Scott. “It showed that you can’t afford to have love affairs in deep space. If you do, you immediately have two groups aboard, the pair who are in love and the rest of the crew. That’s the beginning of problems unless you are a space pioneer and settle down with your family.” A far more serious and lethal threat appears in the story. “What gave us the cocoon concept was that insects will utilize others’ bodies to be the host of their eggs. That’s how the alien would use Dallas (Skerritt) and each of the crew members it kills. This explains why the alien doesn’t kill everyone at once, but rather kills them off one by one; it wants to use each person as a separate host each time it has new eggs.”
Introducing the title character required going beyond normal horror genre conventions. “We wanted to do something so outrageous that no one would know it was coming,” said Ridley Scott. “It’s not a door being wrenched open with the monster behind it, or the monster coming roaring through some metal sheeting or grabbing somebody from behind.” The end result was the notorious chest-burster scene. “We had to make a living creature spring out of a man’s chest and keep it from being hokey. Well, we did it, and that’s why it’s so staggering. From a technical point of view I think we worried more about it than any other effect in the film. If we hadn’t gotten it right, we might as well have forgotten the whole thing.” The sequence accomplished what Scott had hoped to achieve. “The film took on a more serious identity.”
“The original concept was constructed around the notion of Ten Little Indians [1965]. In the planning and writing stages there were to be seven major sequences, one of which was the chest-burster,” recalled Ridley Scott. “As the script was reworked, and as we shot the film, however, other sequences that were equally powerful, such as the airlock depressurization, the flamethrower death of Parker [Yaphet Kotto] and Lambert [Veronica Cartwright], and the cocoon scene with Dallas [Tom Skerritt] were cut altogether or changed.” The design of the alien was revised numerous times. “We had gone through various sketches in the preproduction phase, and I’d seen drawings that other people had tried as well. They always seemed to be of scaly bodies with claws or huge blobs that would move across the floor. There was no elegance to them, no lethalness. What emerged was an H.R. Giger-designed humanoid with distinctly biomechanoid tendencies.”
“The sets were difficult,” confided the filmmaker, “because I wanted to create an oppressive, claustrophobic atmosphere of low ceilings.” Adding further to the onscreen tension are the sound effects, such as the opening and closing of the iris-type cutoffs in the airshaft sequence. “The idea was to make you feel uneasy. We tried to use something that reminded you of a guillotine, something that wasn’t pleasant so maybe you’d start thinking, ‘Is the beast coming this way?’” The camerawork assisted in setting the tone for the picture. “If you ever analyze a shot, everything is always slightly moving. It’s never still, which I think makes the audience slightly uneasy.” There is one thing which Scott regrets about the film. “There were no speculative scenes or discussions about what the alien was…I believe audiences love those, especially if they’re well done. They give the threat much more weight.”
“With Alien we had big arguments over the last three reels of the film. Some people felt they were just too much,” said Ridley Scott. “I know it’s never too much, not when you get the proper balance. You’ve got to keep topping yourself. So if you start at a level that’s already pretty heated, you’ve got to keep going and going. That is the nature of this film.” The reaction at the Dallas, Texas screening left film editor Terry Rawlings (Entrapment) stunned, “It was the most incredible preview I’ve ever attended. I mean, people were screaming and running out of the theatre.” Audiences flocked to see the science fiction-horror picture causing the $11 million production to gross $105 million worldwide, thereby, turning unknown Broadway actress Sigourney Weaver into a female action-hero star.
Alien won the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects; it was introduced into the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress in 2002, and the American Film Institute listed the picture 7th on the Top 10 Sci-Fi Films of All-Time in 2008. Three sequels were subsequently released, Aliens (1986), Alien³ (1992), and Alien Resurrection (1997); for film critic Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times, they do not compare to the original version, “The 1979 Alien is a much more cerebral movie than its sequels, with the characters (and the audience) genuinely engaged in curiosity about this weirdest of life-forms…Unfortunately, the films it influenced studied its thrills but not its thinking.”
For seven months Ridley Scott developed a science fiction classic by author Frank Herbert for the big screen. “Dune was going to take a lot more work. And I didn’t have the heart to attack that work,” confessed the filmmaker of the picture which was released in 1984 under the direction of David Lynch (Blue Velvet). “I felt I couldn’t sit around for another two and a half years on Dune, which is how long I thought it was going to take...I needed immediate activity, needed to get my mind off my [older] brother’s death. So I went to Dino [DeLaurentiis to tell him] I had to depart Dune and that the script was his.”
Not leaving behind the science fiction genre, Ridley Scott shifted his attention to Dangerous Days, an adaptation of Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by novelist Philip K. Dick. “In the book, he’s [Rick Deckard] a bit of a renegade, a freelancer, with a bonus for each job,” stated the director. “But in the film he’s part of bureaucracy. We thought it would be nice to see this character gradually emerge as a very efficient exterminator who is almost Kafkaesque.”
Rick Deckard is dispatched by the government police force to hunt and eliminate a group of androids called replicants who have illegally come to earth. As the story evolved with screenwriter Hampton Fancher (The Minus Man), Scott came to a conclusion, “I finally said to Hampton, ‘You know, we can’t keep calling Deckard a goddamn detective.’ And he said, ‘Why not?’ I replied, ‘Because we’re telling a story in 2019 for Christ’s sake. The word ‘detective’ will probably be around then, but this job Deckard does killing androids, that requires something new. We’ve got to come up with a bloody name for his profession.’” Fancher’s solution was to use the title Blade Runner: A Movie from a book written by William Burroughs. The rights to the title were subsequently purchased for a nominal fee. “I thought the words ‘Blade Runner’ very well suited our needs,” approved Scott. “It was a nice, threatening name that neatly described a violent action.”
“Sci-fi presents a wonderful opportunity, because if you get it right, anything goes,” observed the filmmaker. “But you’d better have drawn up your rule book for the world you’ve created first. Then you’d better stick to it.” A critical decision was made in regards to the futuristic tale. “We drew a line [in the screenplay development]. We wouldn’t explore the laboratory details, the genetic explanations. Instead we asked, ‘What if large combines in the next few decades became almost as powerful as the government?’ Which is possible. They’d move into all sorts of industries – arms, chemicals, aerospace – and eventually they’d go into genetics.”
Describing the environment of Blade Runner (1982), which takes place in the Los Angeles of 2019, Scott remarked, “Our vision was really of a clogged world, where you get a sense of a city on overload, where things may stop at any time. Services may give out – in fact, they already have ceased in at least some parts of the city. Everything is old or badly serviced, and the bureaucratic system running the city is totally disorganized.” Selected to play the main character of Rick Deckard was Harrison Ford (Witness) who performs alongside Rutger Hauer (Ladyhawke), Sean Young (No Way Out), Daryl Hannah (Splash), Edward James Olmos (Stand and Deliver), M. Emmet Walsh (Blood Simple), William Sanderson (Coal Miner’s Daughter), and Joanna Cassidy (Under Fire). “Batty’s [Hauer] death scene is in a way the final demonstration of his superiority over Deckard [Ford],” said the moviemaker. “He could have taken Deckard’s life – Deckard had just killed Pris [Hannah] – but decided as a gift to let him live. The white pigeon that he sets free into the sky is, of course, a symbol of peace and life.”
In the July 24, 1980 draft of the script by Hampton Fancher there is a sixth escaped replicant. “The woman is pretty, a touch of grey in her hair, kind and blue-eyed. Mary looks like an American dream mom, right out of Father Knows Best.” Cast to play the part was Stacey Nelkin (Bullets Over Broadway) who was subsequently devastated to learn that the role had been eliminated due to financial reasons. “I still feel a bit badly about that,” confessed Ridley Scott. “Mary was going to be the only replicant that the audience would have gotten to see naturally fade away. What we’d come up with was a situation that took place early on in the film. In a dark room, with the other replicants watching, Mary dies. That’s how we were going to introduce the replicants.”
For Fancher and co-screenwriter David Webb Peoples (Unforgiven), the idea of Rick Deckard being a replicant was a result of their work being misinterpreted by Ridley Scott; their intention was to invoke empathy by emphasizing the similarities between humans and the artificial creations through the main character. In reference to the dream sequence featured in the Director’s Cut, Scott said, “I’d predetermined that the unicorn scene would be the strongest clue that Deckard, this hunter of replicants, might actually be an artificial human himself.” Harrison Ford disagreed with his director on the origins of the government-sponsored assassin. “[Ridley] wanted the audience to find out that Deckard was a replicant,” stated Ford. “I fought that because I felt that the audience needed somebody to cheer for.”
Ford’s misgivings were well-founded as the picture was a commercial flop, earning $33 million worldwide while costing $28 million to make. “Blade Runner taught me that the American public tends to favour a high-fiber diet which infers that the American system is one containing a certain degree of optimism,” stated Ridley Scott. “I, on the other hand, tend to be a bit darker…Not because I’m a manic-depressive, but because I find darkness more interesting.”
Blade Runner was nominated for Best Art Direction-Set Direction and Best Visual Effects at the Oscars; while the BAFTAs saw the picture win Best Cinematography, Best Costume Design, Best Production Design-Art Direction as well as receive nominations for Best Editing, Best Make Up Artist, Best Score, Best Sound, and Best Special Visual Effects.
After the failure of its theatrical screening, Blade Runner experienced a rebirth in the home video marketplace, causing the American Film Institute to list the picture 6th on its Top 10 Sci-Fi Films of All-Time in 2008. “Blade Runner works on a level which I haven’t seen much – or ever – in a mainstream film,” declared Scott. “It works like a book. Like a very dark novel, which I like. It’s definitely a film that’s designed not to have the usual crush-wallop-bang! impact.” The director added, “I think Blade Runner is a good lesson for all serious filmmakers to ‘stand by your guns.’ Don’t listen to acclaim or criticism. Simply carry on. Hopefully, you’ll do some worthwhile work which stands the test of time.”
Though he had established himself as a feature film director, Ridley Scott produced his most celebrated commercial in 1984. The sixty second spot introduced Apple Computer’s Macintosh personal computer and it was only aired once during the third quarter of Super Bowl XVIII. Borrowing the name as well as inspiration from George Orwell’s classic novel 1984, Scott created a dystopian tale starring a nameless athletic heroine (Anya Major) who carries a large brass-headed hammer while chased by four agents of the Thought Police; she breaks into a private assembly and tosses her weapon at a large screen image of a Big Brother figure (David Graham), thereby shattering the picture in a blaze of light and smoke. “One of the problems was to find a girl who could throw a hammer and look business-like,” remarked Scott. The ad was so successful that in 1999 TV Guide called it the “Number One Greatest Commercial of All-Time” and in 2007, 1984 was named the best Super Bowl spot in the game’s forty-year history.
Not wanting his next project to be “profoundly European”, Ridley Scott contacted the American author responsible for Angel Heart and Gray Matters about writing a screenplay centred around “a young hermit [Tom Cruise] who becomes a hero when he battles the evil Lord of Darkness [Tim Curry], rescues a beautiful princess [Mia Sara] and frees the world from its icy winter curse.”
“The characters really came from left field,” recollected novelist turned screenwriter William Hjortsberg. “We discussed the hero in many forms before deciding on Jack O’ The Green [Cruise]. Then Ridley decided we should have a quest. He also wanted unicorns and thought there should be magic armor and a sword. I came up with the idea of having the world plunged into the wintry darkness. So we had all these elements which had to be woven into a story.” In describing Legend (1985), Ridley Scott stated, “It is not a film of the future, or of the past. It is not even a story of now. The conflict between darkness and light has been with us since creation…and will remain with us through eternity.”
To devise the villain of the story, the director turned to a picture he saw during his childhood. “The beast in [Jean] Cocteau [version of Beauty and the Beast] is never horrible. When I was a kid, the beginning of the movie made me very afraid, but very soon you realize there is something else. I wanted that with Darkness. I didn’t want to put a barrier between the audience and him…I wanted Darkness to be healthy, not disgusting psychologically and physically, because I had a feeling that Evil treats itself better, more often than not, than Good.” For the part of Darkness, Scott considered casting Peter O’Toole (Lawrence of Arabia) whom he concluded lacked the right physique for the role; he then set his sights on hiring Tim Curry who had garnered acclaim for his performance in The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975). “I like the control he has over himself,” remarked Scott on his reason for selecting Curry. “He is very physical and powerful, theatrically speaking. He knows when he needs to stop. It was great to work with him.”
“What I am trying to do, even if I start with a complicated story, is to bring it back to its primitive linearity”, revealed Ridley Scott. “In fairy tales there is always an element of the nightmare.” Fifteen hundred icicles were added to the set varying from one foot to eight feet; they were made from resin and hot wax. Just two days before finishing the principle photography, a fire broke out on the famous 007 sound stage at Pinewood Studios, destroying the forest set. The art department had to rebuild the section of the forest which was needed to complete the filming at a separate location.
“It was a huge risk,” admitted Ridley Scott. “Did I think that the film worked? Absolutely I thought the film worked. Did people get it? Again, no, they didn’t, even though there was an enormous amount of absolutely brilliant work in it.” Part of the story confusion for moviegoers may have resulted from the American theatrical version being severely shortened. Legend proved to be an even bigger worldwide box office disappointment than Blade Runner had been as the movie earned half of its $30 million production budget.
Venturing into new cinematic territory, the British director selected a contemporary thriller as his next project.
Continue to Part 3
For more on Ridley Scott visit RSA Films, or check out Ridley Scott's Legend FAQ and Paul M. Sammon's Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner.
Five Essential Films of Ridley Scott
DVD Giveaway - Blade Runner: The Final Cut
The profile has also been republished as part of the Ridley Scott blogathon at Seeti Maar - Diary of a Movie Lover.
Apple Macintosh 1984 Superbowl Commercial:
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
Thoughts on... Possession (2002)
Possession, 2002.
Directed by Neil LaBute.
Starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Aaron Eckhart, Jeremy Northam, Jennifer Ehle and Lena Headey.
SYNOPSIS:
Roland's discovery of an undiscovered letter of a famous poet changes the course of his life - and scholarship. It leads him to Maud, an expert on a hitherto unconnected poet. They retrace the Victorian bards' lives and footsteps in a race against other academics to discover the result of those letters - and the will-they-won't-they relationship between the two scholars.
This is a story that I have mixed feelings on because it involves ideas in my own writing. I am both drawn to it for that similarity, but then annoyed as it does not go where I would have hoped. I suspect all lovers of this or any book share this in essence, when it comes to adaptation. We are all crafters of our idea of how the story should be, and we have to watch someone else's interpretation.
Did American Neil LaBute have the right to take this much loved English highbrow novel by A.S. Byatt into a Hollywood blockbuster?
According to LaBute's director's commentary, Warner were after the rights to the book the year it won the Booker prize. But it took 12 years to make, with various people being attached then unattached. So why did LaBute's presence and script get the green light where others had not?
He says he's a fan of the book, and perhaps he should feel he as much right to his admiration of the book and his vision of it as a film as the next director. Scrolling through online reviews, it's clear that both book and film have fans among those enjoying simply a passionate love mystery. (I have discussed the elitism of the book on Associated Content).
This film goes too fast and I believe it must have been a longer film, now shorn too far. Note to filmmakers - do not assume a 90 minute film is more successful and palatable to an audience and put pressure on filmmakers to make shorter features. We need, as a viewer, to be satisfied by the film, and I think that few stories are truly told in under two hours. Surely the kind of audience interested in Possession would wish for a film that was also erudite and thoughtful, which may also mean longer?
Making Roland (Eckhart) an American felt like a conscious effort to woo an American audience - which apparently it is not. But what director Neil LaBute saw as transatlantic tensions, for me felt like clichéd commercialism. I wonder if some of LaBute's thoughts are reflected in the comment by Roland to an Englishman: 'What's your problem with Americans?' Were those silly obvious remarks about Roland's nationality paraphrases of LaBute's experience? Did LaBute also attempt to deal with international feelings when Maud (Paltrow) criticises Roland for taking the letters - as Americans assume everything is their right? But the film plays down that American Professor Mortimer Cropper wants to take all the special acquisitions they find to the US. In the book, the drive of the rivalry and chase is to keep British treasures in our own country. Yes I am aware of the Elgin marbles and I know we have the Rosetta Stone and did have the Stone of Scone. I do feel countries should retain their own treasures, though I know British and Irish architecture have been shipped West - and that makes me mad.
Changing Roland's nationality does nothing for the film; and there was an interesting American character - Leonora Stern - who was finally cut from the film, whom I missed. I felt that by cutting Roland and Maud's lovers, we loose some of the parallel between them and their research interests.
As Sight and Sound's review points out, in changing Roland's personality, you change an important point of the story. The dynamic of a shy moley man with a woman on more money and with more confidence is important. Whereas Val chose the reverse - she ends up with the rich, confidence male lawyer. And Maud, who had been wooed by successful Fergus Wolfe, chooses Roland instead to fall in love with.
In my first recent re-viewing of the film, I thought that the letters and poems of the book came through. Now I have finished the book and rewatched the film, with and without director's commentary. My view has changed - too much of the poetry and letters have gone.
This novel is difficult to translate because words are so important to it; and poems do not translate to imagery; the nature and order of the words are so important. Expressions of an actor do not convey all we need to know - another prevalent misconception.
I wondered if the Mesulina might have been interesting to film - or would that seem too bizarre? Perhaps that too is interesting - that myths on the page are absurd when made actual.
I felt that the movie Scooby doo-ed the literary novel, but the cartoon mystery team is there in Byatt. Cropper does grave rob; he and Fergus are simply enemies; Lord Bailey does tell Fergus to get off the line and hold a gun to him and Cropper. But the silliness came in the fight between Roland and Cropper. In the book, a great wind prevents Cropper escaping, which is far better.
The ending is as it is in the book, and I hadn’t expected that coda about Ash (Northam) meeting his child - I assumed it must be Hollywood-sation.
I felt that there was not enough of the relationships. We needed to see more of Blanche (Headey) and Christabel (Ehle), for as LaBute says in his commentary, we never see them as happy and pre-Ash. I wondered in the novel whether they were lesbians as we'd understand them or if their relationship was closer to that of Ash and Ellen - an non physical companionship. The novel is very vague about Christabel's "shared solitary existence" and I never found a point where she tells Ash about Blanche. Her suicide note is also important as it links to her belief on séances and that her death was not the end of her, but only of an unhappy earthy existence.
Like The Bridges of Madison County (1995), I never believed in a short adulterous affair that could last in the lover's minds so long. Its short duration is what made it special; for fires go out - that kind of love rarely lasts and gives the kind of steady satisfaction that Blanche and Ellen's companionship brought. I didn't like the coldness of Christabel and contrasted her hardness with the sparkling eyes of Ehle when she played Eliza Bennet. She turned off all sparkle here to be an calculating adulterer, not caring who she hurt.
We did not see enough of that first meeting: the party and séance discussion that were 'extraordinary' as in the first draft of Ash's letter.
The séance is far more dramatic in the book and I though it would be good to have it so on screen - where Ash is angry it seems due to the farcical nature of a séance, but we believe it is because his child has been murdered by its mother.
I was also sorry that the symbolism of going into the garden and the cats was missed out of the film; and that Roland is finally able to write his own poetry and gets a lectureship at the end.
I found myself wanting to like the film more than I could. Having just seen sweeping, high brow Italian I Am Love (2009), I wonder how a European director might have tackled Byatt's book and kept more of the intelligence and power.
Elspeth Rushbrook
www.myspace.com/elspethr
Directed by Neil LaBute.
Starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Aaron Eckhart, Jeremy Northam, Jennifer Ehle and Lena Headey.
SYNOPSIS:
Roland's discovery of an undiscovered letter of a famous poet changes the course of his life - and scholarship. It leads him to Maud, an expert on a hitherto unconnected poet. They retrace the Victorian bards' lives and footsteps in a race against other academics to discover the result of those letters - and the will-they-won't-they relationship between the two scholars.
This is a story that I have mixed feelings on because it involves ideas in my own writing. I am both drawn to it for that similarity, but then annoyed as it does not go where I would have hoped. I suspect all lovers of this or any book share this in essence, when it comes to adaptation. We are all crafters of our idea of how the story should be, and we have to watch someone else's interpretation.
Did American Neil LaBute have the right to take this much loved English highbrow novel by A.S. Byatt into a Hollywood blockbuster?
According to LaBute's director's commentary, Warner were after the rights to the book the year it won the Booker prize. But it took 12 years to make, with various people being attached then unattached. So why did LaBute's presence and script get the green light where others had not?
He says he's a fan of the book, and perhaps he should feel he as much right to his admiration of the book and his vision of it as a film as the next director. Scrolling through online reviews, it's clear that both book and film have fans among those enjoying simply a passionate love mystery. (I have discussed the elitism of the book on Associated Content).
This film goes too fast and I believe it must have been a longer film, now shorn too far. Note to filmmakers - do not assume a 90 minute film is more successful and palatable to an audience and put pressure on filmmakers to make shorter features. We need, as a viewer, to be satisfied by the film, and I think that few stories are truly told in under two hours. Surely the kind of audience interested in Possession would wish for a film that was also erudite and thoughtful, which may also mean longer?
Making Roland (Eckhart) an American felt like a conscious effort to woo an American audience - which apparently it is not. But what director Neil LaBute saw as transatlantic tensions, for me felt like clichéd commercialism. I wonder if some of LaBute's thoughts are reflected in the comment by Roland to an Englishman: 'What's your problem with Americans?' Were those silly obvious remarks about Roland's nationality paraphrases of LaBute's experience? Did LaBute also attempt to deal with international feelings when Maud (Paltrow) criticises Roland for taking the letters - as Americans assume everything is their right? But the film plays down that American Professor Mortimer Cropper wants to take all the special acquisitions they find to the US. In the book, the drive of the rivalry and chase is to keep British treasures in our own country. Yes I am aware of the Elgin marbles and I know we have the Rosetta Stone and did have the Stone of Scone. I do feel countries should retain their own treasures, though I know British and Irish architecture have been shipped West - and that makes me mad.
Changing Roland's nationality does nothing for the film; and there was an interesting American character - Leonora Stern - who was finally cut from the film, whom I missed. I felt that by cutting Roland and Maud's lovers, we loose some of the parallel between them and their research interests.
As Sight and Sound's review points out, in changing Roland's personality, you change an important point of the story. The dynamic of a shy moley man with a woman on more money and with more confidence is important. Whereas Val chose the reverse - she ends up with the rich, confidence male lawyer. And Maud, who had been wooed by successful Fergus Wolfe, chooses Roland instead to fall in love with.
In my first recent re-viewing of the film, I thought that the letters and poems of the book came through. Now I have finished the book and rewatched the film, with and without director's commentary. My view has changed - too much of the poetry and letters have gone.
This novel is difficult to translate because words are so important to it; and poems do not translate to imagery; the nature and order of the words are so important. Expressions of an actor do not convey all we need to know - another prevalent misconception.
I wondered if the Mesulina might have been interesting to film - or would that seem too bizarre? Perhaps that too is interesting - that myths on the page are absurd when made actual.
I felt that the movie Scooby doo-ed the literary novel, but the cartoon mystery team is there in Byatt. Cropper does grave rob; he and Fergus are simply enemies; Lord Bailey does tell Fergus to get off the line and hold a gun to him and Cropper. But the silliness came in the fight between Roland and Cropper. In the book, a great wind prevents Cropper escaping, which is far better.
The ending is as it is in the book, and I hadn’t expected that coda about Ash (Northam) meeting his child - I assumed it must be Hollywood-sation.
I felt that there was not enough of the relationships. We needed to see more of Blanche (Headey) and Christabel (Ehle), for as LaBute says in his commentary, we never see them as happy and pre-Ash. I wondered in the novel whether they were lesbians as we'd understand them or if their relationship was closer to that of Ash and Ellen - an non physical companionship. The novel is very vague about Christabel's "shared solitary existence" and I never found a point where she tells Ash about Blanche. Her suicide note is also important as it links to her belief on séances and that her death was not the end of her, but only of an unhappy earthy existence.
Like The Bridges of Madison County (1995), I never believed in a short adulterous affair that could last in the lover's minds so long. Its short duration is what made it special; for fires go out - that kind of love rarely lasts and gives the kind of steady satisfaction that Blanche and Ellen's companionship brought. I didn't like the coldness of Christabel and contrasted her hardness with the sparkling eyes of Ehle when she played Eliza Bennet. She turned off all sparkle here to be an calculating adulterer, not caring who she hurt.
We did not see enough of that first meeting: the party and séance discussion that were 'extraordinary' as in the first draft of Ash's letter.
The séance is far more dramatic in the book and I though it would be good to have it so on screen - where Ash is angry it seems due to the farcical nature of a séance, but we believe it is because his child has been murdered by its mother.
I was also sorry that the symbolism of going into the garden and the cats was missed out of the film; and that Roland is finally able to write his own poetry and gets a lectureship at the end.
I found myself wanting to like the film more than I could. Having just seen sweeping, high brow Italian I Am Love (2009), I wonder how a European director might have tackled Byatt's book and kept more of the intelligence and power.
Elspeth Rushbrook
www.myspace.com/elspethr
UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 23/04/10
UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 23rd - Sunday 25th April 2010.
The calm before the impending summer storm provides a miserable weekend for the UK box office with only newly released Date Night managing to break seven figures. The Steve Carell - Tina Fey rom-com takes the top spot with £1.2m, which is the lowest haul for a debuting number one film in the last twelve months.
Second and third remain unchanged with 3D efforts Clash of the Titans and How To Train Your Dragon continuing to perform well after battling each other for screens these past four weeks. Meanwhile last week's champion Dear John shows less staying power with a drop of almost 60% pushing the romantic drama down to fourth in its second week and knocking Matthew Vaughn's Kick-Ass into fifth, with the superhero comedy crossing £10m in after four weeks on screens.
In the bottom half of the chart political thriller The Ghost holds firm in sixth ahead of the debuting It's A Wonderful Afterlife, the new comedy from Bend It Like Beckham director Gurinder Chadha. The film manages a seventh placed opening to match last weekend's fellow Brit comedy Cemetery Junction, although the latter managed to bank over £200k more before disappearing from the top ten at the second attempt.
Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang and Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland remain static in eighth and ninth to continue their strong returns for another week, while Demi Moore must be having nosebleeds with a tenth-placed opening for new drama The Joneses giving the actress a rare appearance in the chart.
Number one this time last year: State of Play
Incoming...
The big release this week comes in the shape of superhero sequel Iron Man II (cert. 12A), which sees director Jon Favreau reteam with Robert Downey Jr. to do battle with Ivan Vanko (Mickey Rourke), a.k.a. Whiplash. The original was one of the biggest hits of 2008 and there will be high hopes for the sequel, which should obliterate the competition this coming weekend to take top spot.
Also opening on Friday is the action-adventure Valhalla Rising (cert. 15), war biopic John Rabe (cert. 15), Miley Cyrus abomination The Last Song (cert. PG) and Brit drama A Boy Called Dad (cert. 15).
U.K. Box Office Archive
The calm before the impending summer storm provides a miserable weekend for the UK box office with only newly released Date Night managing to break seven figures. The Steve Carell - Tina Fey rom-com takes the top spot with £1.2m, which is the lowest haul for a debuting number one film in the last twelve months.
Second and third remain unchanged with 3D efforts Clash of the Titans and How To Train Your Dragon continuing to perform well after battling each other for screens these past four weeks. Meanwhile last week's champion Dear John shows less staying power with a drop of almost 60% pushing the romantic drama down to fourth in its second week and knocking Matthew Vaughn's Kick-Ass into fifth, with the superhero comedy crossing £10m in after four weeks on screens.
In the bottom half of the chart political thriller The Ghost holds firm in sixth ahead of the debuting It's A Wonderful Afterlife, the new comedy from Bend It Like Beckham director Gurinder Chadha. The film manages a seventh placed opening to match last weekend's fellow Brit comedy Cemetery Junction, although the latter managed to bank over £200k more before disappearing from the top ten at the second attempt.
Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang and Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland remain static in eighth and ninth to continue their strong returns for another week, while Demi Moore must be having nosebleeds with a tenth-placed opening for new drama The Joneses giving the actress a rare appearance in the chart.
Number one this time last year: State of Play
Pos. | Film | Weekend Gross | Week | Total UK Gross |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Date Night | £1,272,405 | 1 | £1,272,405 |
2 | Clash of the Titans | £985,344 | 4 | £18,070,779 |
3 | How To Train Your Dragon | £821,638 | 4 | £14,256,991 |
4 | Dear John | £812,287 | 2 | £3,576,643 |
5 | Kick-Ass | £635,270 | 4 | £10,241,210 |
6 | The Ghost | £631,032 | 2 | £2,047,538 |
7 | It's A Wonderful Afterlife | £464,468 | 1 | £464,468 |
8 | Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang | £397,371 | 5 | £15,169,311 |
9 | Alice in Wonderland | £278,855 | 8 | £41,915,826 |
10 | The Joneses | £247,178 | 1 | £247,178 |
Incoming...
The big release this week comes in the shape of superhero sequel Iron Man II (cert. 12A), which sees director Jon Favreau reteam with Robert Downey Jr. to do battle with Ivan Vanko (Mickey Rourke), a.k.a. Whiplash. The original was one of the biggest hits of 2008 and there will be high hopes for the sequel, which should obliterate the competition this coming weekend to take top spot.
Also opening on Friday is the action-adventure Valhalla Rising (cert. 15), war biopic John Rabe (cert. 15), Miley Cyrus abomination The Last Song (cert. PG) and Brit drama A Boy Called Dad (cert. 15).
U.K. Box Office Archive
Monday, April 26, 2010
DVD Giveaway - Blade Runner: The Final Cut - NOW CLOSED
Sci-fi classic up for grabs...
We're running a bit of a Ridley Scott theme here at Flickering Myth and to coincide with Trevor Hogg's latest article Hard to Replicate: A Ridley Scott Profile, we have a copy of the science fiction masterpiece Blade Runner: The Final Cut up for grabs.
This two disc special edition was released to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the film, with Ridley Scott returning to the edit suite to present this definitive version containing never-before-seen footage, added dialogue and new and improved special effects. The DVD also comes with three filmmaker commentaries including one by Scott, along with the comprehensive three-and-a-half hour documentary Dangerous Days: Making Blade Runner, which features deleted scenes, outtakes and cast and crew interviews.
PLEASE NOTE THIS GIVEAWAY IS NOW CLOSED.
Ridley Scott's classic Hovis bread advert - voted the UK's all-time favourite:
The Prize Finder - UK Competitions
Loquax Competitions
We're running a bit of a Ridley Scott theme here at Flickering Myth and to coincide with Trevor Hogg's latest article Hard to Replicate: A Ridley Scott Profile, we have a copy of the science fiction masterpiece Blade Runner: The Final Cut up for grabs.
This two disc special edition was released to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the film, with Ridley Scott returning to the edit suite to present this definitive version containing never-before-seen footage, added dialogue and new and improved special effects. The DVD also comes with three filmmaker commentaries including one by Scott, along with the comprehensive three-and-a-half hour documentary Dangerous Days: Making Blade Runner, which features deleted scenes, outtakes and cast and crew interviews.
PLEASE NOTE THIS GIVEAWAY IS NOW CLOSED.
Ridley Scott's classic Hovis bread advert - voted the UK's all-time favourite:
The Prize Finder - UK Competitions
Loquax Competitions
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Short Film Showcase - Boy and Bicycle (1965)
Boy and Bicycle, 1965.
Directed by Ridley Scott.
Starring Tony Scott.
Boy and Bicycle is the debut film of British director Ridley Scott and stars younger brother Tony as a schoolboy truant who spends the day visiting various locations around his northern seaside town, while a voice-over provides an insight into his frustrations and teenage angst.
Made in the early 60s using a 16mm camera borrowed from London's Royal College of Art while a student, Scott shot the film in his native North East of England and it was eventually completed in 1965 following a grant from the British Film Institute. This also allowed the director to secure the services of composer John Barry (James Bond), who provides the soundtrack to the short.
The film provides an early glimpse at the director's potential, drawing on influences such as Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal (1956) and the James Joyce novel Ulysses (1922), and including a number of Scott trademarks including the industrial landscape which would be so prominent in later efforts such as Alien and Blade Runner.
Related:
Hard to Replicate: A Ridley Scott Profile
Five Essential Films of Ridley Scott
Five Essential Films of Tony Scott
Click here to view more short films and public domain features.
Directed by Ridley Scott.
Starring Tony Scott.
Boy and Bicycle is the debut film of British director Ridley Scott and stars younger brother Tony as a schoolboy truant who spends the day visiting various locations around his northern seaside town, while a voice-over provides an insight into his frustrations and teenage angst.
Made in the early 60s using a 16mm camera borrowed from London's Royal College of Art while a student, Scott shot the film in his native North East of England and it was eventually completed in 1965 following a grant from the British Film Institute. This also allowed the director to secure the services of composer John Barry (James Bond), who provides the soundtrack to the short.
The film provides an early glimpse at the director's potential, drawing on influences such as Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal (1956) and the James Joyce novel Ulysses (1922), and including a number of Scott trademarks including the industrial landscape which would be so prominent in later efforts such as Alien and Blade Runner.
Related:
Hard to Replicate: A Ridley Scott Profile
Five Essential Films of Ridley Scott
Five Essential Films of Tony Scott
Click here to view more short films and public domain features.
Friday, April 23, 2010
Ridley Scott talks Alien prequel
Rumours of Ridley Scott reuniting with Sigourney Weaver to return to the franchise he launched back in 1979 with his breakthrough sci-fi horror Alien had been swirling around for many a year before confirmation last summer that he would indeed be slipping into the director's chair once again to helm a prequel.
Well, Scott has finally broken his silence and spoke to MTV about his plans for the flick, which is set 30 years prior to the original and will solve the mystery of the fossilized Space Jockey - something that he had earlier suggested on the commentary for the special edition Alien DVD.
"It's fundamentally about going out to find out 'Who the hell was that Space Jockey?' The guy who was sitting in the chair in the alien vehicle — there was a giant fellow sitting in a seat on what looked to be either a piece of technology or an astronomer's chair."
The director also provided an insight into the story, which looks focus on the dastardly Weyland Corporation setting out to terraform plants and presumably running into Xenomorph trouble along the way. Although Ripley may be out, the director firmly intends to stick with the series' trademark female lead: "The main character will be a woman, yeah. We're thinking it could go down that route."
The as-yet untitled prequel is tentatively scheduled for 2011 and will be produced by Scott Free Productions, with Jon Spaihts currently attached to writing duties.
Related:
Hard to Replicate: A Ridley Scott Profile
Five Essential Films of Ridley Scott
Well, Scott has finally broken his silence and spoke to MTV about his plans for the flick, which is set 30 years prior to the original and will solve the mystery of the fossilized Space Jockey - something that he had earlier suggested on the commentary for the special edition Alien DVD.
"It's fundamentally about going out to find out 'Who the hell was that Space Jockey?' The guy who was sitting in the chair in the alien vehicle — there was a giant fellow sitting in a seat on what looked to be either a piece of technology or an astronomer's chair."
The director also provided an insight into the story, which looks focus on the dastardly Weyland Corporation setting out to terraform plants and presumably running into Xenomorph trouble along the way. Although Ripley may be out, the director firmly intends to stick with the series' trademark female lead: "The main character will be a woman, yeah. We're thinking it could go down that route."
The as-yet untitled prequel is tentatively scheduled for 2011 and will be produced by Scott Free Productions, with Jon Spaihts currently attached to writing duties.
Related:
Hard to Replicate: A Ridley Scott Profile
Five Essential Films of Ridley Scott
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Pandora's Tree of Souls takes root in London to promote Avatar
With the release of James Cameron's epic sci-fi blockbuster Avatar on DVD and Blu-ray just around the corner, studio 20th Century Fox are erecting a giant interactive replica of Pandora's ‘Tree Of Souls’ at Speakers’ Corner in Hyde Park, London this coming weekend.
The tree will be recreated with 20 miles of fibre optic branches and includes motion sensors that enables it to pick up movement and change colour and intensity as people approach. Visitors will also be able to connect directly to the structure via their mobile phones and iPods to get their hands on exclusive content and upload photos that will be displayed on a screen embedded in the trunk.
Running in conjunction with the 40th anniversary of International Earth Day, the studio will also be planting a tree for each visitor who connects as part of a global initiative to plant a million new trees worldwide.
The Tree of Souls is on display from Saturday 24th - Monday 26th of April, and will be officially unveiled by Colonel Miles Quaritch himself, actor Stephen Lang.
Lang will also be attending an special UK Avatar launch and signing session at HMV in Oxford Street at 4pm on Sunday 25th April, with customers receiving exclusive Avatar goodies including the opportunity to have their picture taken in the world of Pandora via special green screen technology. Due to anticipated high demand for the event 400 wristbands will be issued for access to the signing queue, and will be available from the store on the day of the event from 10am on a first come first served basis.
Avatar is released on DVD and Blu-ray on Monday 26th April.
The tree will be recreated with 20 miles of fibre optic branches and includes motion sensors that enables it to pick up movement and change colour and intensity as people approach. Visitors will also be able to connect directly to the structure via their mobile phones and iPods to get their hands on exclusive content and upload photos that will be displayed on a screen embedded in the trunk.
Running in conjunction with the 40th anniversary of International Earth Day, the studio will also be planting a tree for each visitor who connects as part of a global initiative to plant a million new trees worldwide.
The Tree of Souls is on display from Saturday 24th - Monday 26th of April, and will be officially unveiled by Colonel Miles Quaritch himself, actor Stephen Lang.
Lang will also be attending an special UK Avatar launch and signing session at HMV in Oxford Street at 4pm on Sunday 25th April, with customers receiving exclusive Avatar goodies including the opportunity to have their picture taken in the world of Pandora via special green screen technology. Due to anticipated high demand for the event 400 wristbands will be issued for access to the signing queue, and will be available from the store on the day of the event from 10am on a first come first served basis.
Avatar is released on DVD and Blu-ray on Monday 26th April.
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Hard to Replicate: A Ridley Scott Profile (Part 1)
Trevor Hogg profiles the career of filmmaker Ridley Scott in the first of a five part feature...
“I spent three fantastic years at the Royal College [of Art],” reminisced British filmmaker Ridley Scott of his student days in London. “I went in specifically as a graphic designer. But what was particularly good about the RCA was that it allowed you to move around and investigate different areas. I used to build a sculpture, do some photography, and look in on the school of industrial design. Do a bit of this, and a bit of that. The RCA was an incredibly stimulating, well-rounded environment.”
Chosen as one of six students to make a short film on the budget of $600, Ridley recruited his younger brother and future Hollywood director Tony Scott (Crimson Tide) to star in Boy and Bicycle (1961). “It was a fictional piece, about a half hour long, about kids growing up against an industrial yet somehow romantic landscape in a town on the Northeast coast of England,” recalled the South Shields-native of his directorial debut. “The film really didn’t do anything – it was shown at a few festivals – but a gong went off in my head and I thought: That’s what I’m going to do.”
Rewarded with a traveling scholarship in 1961, Ridley Scott headed to New York to observe the advertising and fashion industry; while there he worked as an editing assistant at Time/Life Inc. for documentary filmmakers Richard Leacock (Tread) and D.A. Pennebaker (Don’t Look Back). A year later, Scott returned to England and was hired by the BBC. “Those days in the early sixties were a terrific time for a TV designer,” stated the filmmaker. “I was building elaborated double-decker sets with cameras on the second story, but I eventually discovered that there were only a few good directors and I became very frustrated by what I considered to be mishandling of my constructions.”
Enrolled in a four month director’s course, Ridley Scott began his quest for a new career path. “I knew I had to do something fairly remarkable. Otherwise, it would be back to the design department.” The project that the young filmmaker had in mind was a ten minute condensed version of Paths of Glory which was adapted into a feature length picture by Stanley Kubrick in 1957. “TV, by encapsulating, often has the effect of making mediocre things seem really good,” observed the director. “It worked, it clicked, and as a result I was offered the direction of a couple of episodes of a popular police-action series called Z Cars [1962 to 1978]. After that, the hierarchy said I had to go back to the design department, so I resigned – a frightening decision, because during my three years at the BBC I’d married, become a father, and gotten a new house.”
Fortunately, within a short period of time, Scott was offered the opportunity to direct a few episodes of The Informer (1966 to 1967, ITV) which he described as being “a very intelligent semi-detective series starring Ian Hendry [Get Carter] in the role of a disbarred lawyer.” The reprieve did not last long, as frustration soon set in again. “You can’t ever totally control what you’re doing in episodic TV.” Having art-directed a number of commercials, as well as directing a half-dozen of them, the moviemaker established Ridley Scott Associates (RSA); he hired his brother Tony as the first of five other directors to work for the fledgling production company which specialized in television ads. “[I] loved the idea of being able to play around with details and really present, even if it was only for thirty or sixty seconds, something I could totally control.”
Proving himself with spots for Benson Hedges and a series of period costume ads for Hovis Bread, Ridley Scott and his group of directorial talent were receiving assignments from Paris, Berlin, and Munich. “If you’re a filmmaker and you’re not filmmaking that’s a fallow period. It’s like being an athlete. If you’re not running around the track, you’re losing your edge. It is like doing a pocket version of a feature film. The advantage with advertising is that you don’t have to live with something for months on end.” There is also another benefit. “My training in commercials was really my film school. It helped build my awareness of how to present suspense and – ‘manipulation’ is a bad word – fascinate the audience and hold it in a kind of dramatic suspension.”
During the late 1960s, word spread to North America resulting in RSA producing ads for Diet Pepsi, Ford Motor Company, Schaeffer Beer, and Pit Stop. “There’d be a preliminary transatlantic phone conference, the storyboard would be air-freighted over, followed by another call to discuss it, then I’d fly over on a Sunday night, spend Monday in conference with the agency and looking at location or studio facilities, usually start shooting the next day, and be back in England by Friday night. The change of pace was exciting but there were drawbacks, too,” recounted Scott of his routine business visits to New York and Los Angeles. “In England, I was used to controlling the project to completion through my own company and being in on the dub and the editing. The agencies in the US were perfectly happy about my disappearing as soon as the shoot was over; they’d put it together their own way after I left.”
Recognizing that the heyday of TV commercials was dissipating, Ridley Scott wrote a screenplay “a very black, very violent comedy-heist somewhat influenced by Performance [1970], which I greatly admired.” A second script co-written with Gerald Vaughan-Hughes (Sebastian) was about the Guy Fawkes Gunpowder Plot. The heist project, Running in Place, was to feature Michael York (The Four Musketeers) until it was aborted in preproduction. “‘You really ought to go back and do a little more filmed TV,’ they [major British studios] kept telling me,” said Scott in reference to the attitude he encountered with the major British movie studios. “Which I felt – I’d pushed through more celluloid in the previous ten years than say, Roman Polanski [Chinatown] – was a bit like teaching your grandmother to suck eggs. I knew they were wrong – these blue-suited assholes – but I figured: If that’s the name of the game, okay, I’ll do some filmed TV.”
Forming a new organization with his brother Tony to develop television series ideas, Ridley Scott soon discovered that the British networks were resistant to accepting independently-created programming. Approached by a French TV company, the siblings set about adapting The Author of Beltraffio for the classic literature series Nouvelles de Henry James (1976); the episode directed by Tony Scott was so successful that the Scotts were sought after for a second collaboration with a production budget of $250,000. “Somehow I’m going to make a feature out of this,” remarked Ridley Scott who had not given up on his big screen ambitions. “It was the same thing as with my first TV exercise: you’ve got to make people aware of the fact that you’re good and give yourself creditability.”
Exploring various literary classics which had entered into the public rights domain, the director found a Napoleonic War story to serve as the basis for his feature film debut. “To be truthful I am not an admirer of [Joseph] Conrad,” confessed Ridley Scott. “I find him heavy going, because I think that generally he has a low level of humour. But The Duel is very tongue-in-cheek. I love the humour, the idiocy of two men dueling over a period of twenty years.”
Collaborating on the screenplay with Gerald Vaughan-Hughes, Scott presented the project to British producer David Putnam (Chariots of Fire). Putnam passed on the script which had been renamed The Duellists (1977) to Paramount president David Picker; the Hollywood studio executive suggested a pair of actors who shared the same agent for the roles of the two feuding French Hussar officers – Keith Carradine (Nashville) and Harvey Keitel (Reservoir Dogs). “They were the baseline of my pyramid,” remarked the filmmaker. “The rest of the casting was simple: you simply began to stockpile talent. Albert Finney [Under the Volcano], who’s tremendously constructive in the sense that he will help if he thinks the project is worthwhile, did a one-day cameo in exchange for a framed cheque for twenty-five pounds inscribed ‘Break glass in case of dire need.’” Other notable British performers who joined the production were Robert Stephens (The Inspector), Edward Fox (A Bridge Too Far), Alan Webb (King Rat), and Jenny Runacre (Goodbye, Mr. Chips).
Often compared to the big budget period picture Barry Lyndon (1975), The Duellists was created on a much smaller scale. Shot over a period of fifty days in France and Scotland, Ridley Scott began his tradition of storyboarding the entire script before the filming commenced, and he served as his own camera operator. “In general, I found there was far too much time wasted pontificating and politicizing with [camera] people who really didn’t know what you wanted.”
A year after the principle photography, Scott began to question the chemistry between his American and British cast members. “The English actors took to their roles more naturally than Keith and Harvey,” observed the director who also wanted to avoid making the picture seem like a theatre stage production. “Possibly because he was slightly intimidated by the material, Keith was more prepared than Harvey to approach it ‘classically,’ that is play the script. Any improvisation that Keith and Harvey did had to do with the physical action rather than dialogue.” Addressing complaints by Harvey Keitel that his role was being significantly altered in the edit suite, Ridley Scott commented, “He tended to milk things; at one point he touched a child on the cheek, apparently to make his character more sympathetic. But I don’t feel that character was changed substantially and there were certainly no ‘big’ scenes of Harvey’s that were cut.”
Having ten weeks to assemble the picture for its Cannes Film Festival premiere made for a hectic post-production schedule. “Two editors worked on the film, splitting it roughly in half and working simultaneously,” revealed Scott. “It’s a great way to work, even without time pressures, because one doesn’t always have to be waiting around for footage to look at. The editors gave me a perspective on pace and kept me from falling into a standard commercial director’s trap, that is, from feeling that you have to have a payoff every thirty or sixty seconds.”
Famed New Yorker film critic Pauline Kael speculated in her review that the scene where the horses nuzzle one another while Keith Carradine and Cristina Raines (Russian Roulette) kiss was “the luckiest shot a beginner movie director ever caught or the most entranced bit of planning a beginner ever dated.” Responding to the remark by Kael, Scott replied, “The mare was in season, so we knew the animals would be a handful, but both Keith and Cristina were Robert Altman [Short Cuts] veterans and I trusted their ability to get through it okay. We did three takes and all three times the horses nuzzled each other. So it was a combination of planning and fantastic good luck.”
Made on a production budget of $1.5 million, The Duellists won the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival for Best First Work; it also competed for the Palme d’Or. The BAFTAs nominated the picture for Best Cinematography and Best Costume Design; and in Italy, Ridley Scott received the David di Donatello Award for Best Director – Foreign Film.
“After the completion of my first film, The Duellists, I prepared to do another period piece, Tristan and Iseult,” recalled the director. “While this was in progress, I was in the United States and saw the opening of Star Wars [1977]. It impressed me so much! It was innovative, sensitive, courageous – I saw it on three consecutive days, and it didn’t diminish at all.” The epic space odyssey caused Scott to have an artistic epiphany. “Star Wars convinced me that there was a great future in science fiction films. So I decided to terminate my development of Tristan and Iseult.”
Around the same time he cancelled his sophomore project, the moviemaker received a script which allowed him to find out whether or not his belief in the science fiction genre was well-founded.
Part two
Please take the time to vote in our poll with your favourite Ridley Scott movie.
Short Film Showcase - Boy and Bicycle (1965)
DVD Giveaway - Blade Runner: The Final Cut
For more on Ridley Scott visit RSA Films, or read our Five Essential Films of Ridley Scott.
The profile has also been republished as part of the Ridley Scott blogathon at Seeti Maar - Diary of a Movie Lover.
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
“I spent three fantastic years at the Royal College [of Art],” reminisced British filmmaker Ridley Scott of his student days in London. “I went in specifically as a graphic designer. But what was particularly good about the RCA was that it allowed you to move around and investigate different areas. I used to build a sculpture, do some photography, and look in on the school of industrial design. Do a bit of this, and a bit of that. The RCA was an incredibly stimulating, well-rounded environment.”
Chosen as one of six students to make a short film on the budget of $600, Ridley recruited his younger brother and future Hollywood director Tony Scott (Crimson Tide) to star in Boy and Bicycle (1961). “It was a fictional piece, about a half hour long, about kids growing up against an industrial yet somehow romantic landscape in a town on the Northeast coast of England,” recalled the South Shields-native of his directorial debut. “The film really didn’t do anything – it was shown at a few festivals – but a gong went off in my head and I thought: That’s what I’m going to do.”
Rewarded with a traveling scholarship in 1961, Ridley Scott headed to New York to observe the advertising and fashion industry; while there he worked as an editing assistant at Time/Life Inc. for documentary filmmakers Richard Leacock (Tread) and D.A. Pennebaker (Don’t Look Back). A year later, Scott returned to England and was hired by the BBC. “Those days in the early sixties were a terrific time for a TV designer,” stated the filmmaker. “I was building elaborated double-decker sets with cameras on the second story, but I eventually discovered that there were only a few good directors and I became very frustrated by what I considered to be mishandling of my constructions.”
Enrolled in a four month director’s course, Ridley Scott began his quest for a new career path. “I knew I had to do something fairly remarkable. Otherwise, it would be back to the design department.” The project that the young filmmaker had in mind was a ten minute condensed version of Paths of Glory which was adapted into a feature length picture by Stanley Kubrick in 1957. “TV, by encapsulating, often has the effect of making mediocre things seem really good,” observed the director. “It worked, it clicked, and as a result I was offered the direction of a couple of episodes of a popular police-action series called Z Cars [1962 to 1978]. After that, the hierarchy said I had to go back to the design department, so I resigned – a frightening decision, because during my three years at the BBC I’d married, become a father, and gotten a new house.”
Fortunately, within a short period of time, Scott was offered the opportunity to direct a few episodes of The Informer (1966 to 1967, ITV) which he described as being “a very intelligent semi-detective series starring Ian Hendry [Get Carter] in the role of a disbarred lawyer.” The reprieve did not last long, as frustration soon set in again. “You can’t ever totally control what you’re doing in episodic TV.” Having art-directed a number of commercials, as well as directing a half-dozen of them, the moviemaker established Ridley Scott Associates (RSA); he hired his brother Tony as the first of five other directors to work for the fledgling production company which specialized in television ads. “[I] loved the idea of being able to play around with details and really present, even if it was only for thirty or sixty seconds, something I could totally control.”
Proving himself with spots for Benson Hedges and a series of period costume ads for Hovis Bread, Ridley Scott and his group of directorial talent were receiving assignments from Paris, Berlin, and Munich. “If you’re a filmmaker and you’re not filmmaking that’s a fallow period. It’s like being an athlete. If you’re not running around the track, you’re losing your edge. It is like doing a pocket version of a feature film. The advantage with advertising is that you don’t have to live with something for months on end.” There is also another benefit. “My training in commercials was really my film school. It helped build my awareness of how to present suspense and – ‘manipulation’ is a bad word – fascinate the audience and hold it in a kind of dramatic suspension.”
During the late 1960s, word spread to North America resulting in RSA producing ads for Diet Pepsi, Ford Motor Company, Schaeffer Beer, and Pit Stop. “There’d be a preliminary transatlantic phone conference, the storyboard would be air-freighted over, followed by another call to discuss it, then I’d fly over on a Sunday night, spend Monday in conference with the agency and looking at location or studio facilities, usually start shooting the next day, and be back in England by Friday night. The change of pace was exciting but there were drawbacks, too,” recounted Scott of his routine business visits to New York and Los Angeles. “In England, I was used to controlling the project to completion through my own company and being in on the dub and the editing. The agencies in the US were perfectly happy about my disappearing as soon as the shoot was over; they’d put it together their own way after I left.”
Recognizing that the heyday of TV commercials was dissipating, Ridley Scott wrote a screenplay “a very black, very violent comedy-heist somewhat influenced by Performance [1970], which I greatly admired.” A second script co-written with Gerald Vaughan-Hughes (Sebastian) was about the Guy Fawkes Gunpowder Plot. The heist project, Running in Place, was to feature Michael York (The Four Musketeers) until it was aborted in preproduction. “‘You really ought to go back and do a little more filmed TV,’ they [major British studios] kept telling me,” said Scott in reference to the attitude he encountered with the major British movie studios. “Which I felt – I’d pushed through more celluloid in the previous ten years than say, Roman Polanski [Chinatown] – was a bit like teaching your grandmother to suck eggs. I knew they were wrong – these blue-suited assholes – but I figured: If that’s the name of the game, okay, I’ll do some filmed TV.”
Forming a new organization with his brother Tony to develop television series ideas, Ridley Scott soon discovered that the British networks were resistant to accepting independently-created programming. Approached by a French TV company, the siblings set about adapting The Author of Beltraffio for the classic literature series Nouvelles de Henry James (1976); the episode directed by Tony Scott was so successful that the Scotts were sought after for a second collaboration with a production budget of $250,000. “Somehow I’m going to make a feature out of this,” remarked Ridley Scott who had not given up on his big screen ambitions. “It was the same thing as with my first TV exercise: you’ve got to make people aware of the fact that you’re good and give yourself creditability.”
Exploring various literary classics which had entered into the public rights domain, the director found a Napoleonic War story to serve as the basis for his feature film debut. “To be truthful I am not an admirer of [Joseph] Conrad,” confessed Ridley Scott. “I find him heavy going, because I think that generally he has a low level of humour. But The Duel is very tongue-in-cheek. I love the humour, the idiocy of two men dueling over a period of twenty years.”
Collaborating on the screenplay with Gerald Vaughan-Hughes, Scott presented the project to British producer David Putnam (Chariots of Fire). Putnam passed on the script which had been renamed The Duellists (1977) to Paramount president David Picker; the Hollywood studio executive suggested a pair of actors who shared the same agent for the roles of the two feuding French Hussar officers – Keith Carradine (Nashville) and Harvey Keitel (Reservoir Dogs). “They were the baseline of my pyramid,” remarked the filmmaker. “The rest of the casting was simple: you simply began to stockpile talent. Albert Finney [Under the Volcano], who’s tremendously constructive in the sense that he will help if he thinks the project is worthwhile, did a one-day cameo in exchange for a framed cheque for twenty-five pounds inscribed ‘Break glass in case of dire need.’” Other notable British performers who joined the production were Robert Stephens (The Inspector), Edward Fox (A Bridge Too Far), Alan Webb (King Rat), and Jenny Runacre (Goodbye, Mr. Chips).
Often compared to the big budget period picture Barry Lyndon (1975), The Duellists was created on a much smaller scale. Shot over a period of fifty days in France and Scotland, Ridley Scott began his tradition of storyboarding the entire script before the filming commenced, and he served as his own camera operator. “In general, I found there was far too much time wasted pontificating and politicizing with [camera] people who really didn’t know what you wanted.”
A year after the principle photography, Scott began to question the chemistry between his American and British cast members. “The English actors took to their roles more naturally than Keith and Harvey,” observed the director who also wanted to avoid making the picture seem like a theatre stage production. “Possibly because he was slightly intimidated by the material, Keith was more prepared than Harvey to approach it ‘classically,’ that is play the script. Any improvisation that Keith and Harvey did had to do with the physical action rather than dialogue.” Addressing complaints by Harvey Keitel that his role was being significantly altered in the edit suite, Ridley Scott commented, “He tended to milk things; at one point he touched a child on the cheek, apparently to make his character more sympathetic. But I don’t feel that character was changed substantially and there were certainly no ‘big’ scenes of Harvey’s that were cut.”
Having ten weeks to assemble the picture for its Cannes Film Festival premiere made for a hectic post-production schedule. “Two editors worked on the film, splitting it roughly in half and working simultaneously,” revealed Scott. “It’s a great way to work, even without time pressures, because one doesn’t always have to be waiting around for footage to look at. The editors gave me a perspective on pace and kept me from falling into a standard commercial director’s trap, that is, from feeling that you have to have a payoff every thirty or sixty seconds.”
Famed New Yorker film critic Pauline Kael speculated in her review that the scene where the horses nuzzle one another while Keith Carradine and Cristina Raines (Russian Roulette) kiss was “the luckiest shot a beginner movie director ever caught or the most entranced bit of planning a beginner ever dated.” Responding to the remark by Kael, Scott replied, “The mare was in season, so we knew the animals would be a handful, but both Keith and Cristina were Robert Altman [Short Cuts] veterans and I trusted their ability to get through it okay. We did three takes and all three times the horses nuzzled each other. So it was a combination of planning and fantastic good luck.”
Made on a production budget of $1.5 million, The Duellists won the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival for Best First Work; it also competed for the Palme d’Or. The BAFTAs nominated the picture for Best Cinematography and Best Costume Design; and in Italy, Ridley Scott received the David di Donatello Award for Best Director – Foreign Film.
“After the completion of my first film, The Duellists, I prepared to do another period piece, Tristan and Iseult,” recalled the director. “While this was in progress, I was in the United States and saw the opening of Star Wars [1977]. It impressed me so much! It was innovative, sensitive, courageous – I saw it on three consecutive days, and it didn’t diminish at all.” The epic space odyssey caused Scott to have an artistic epiphany. “Star Wars convinced me that there was a great future in science fiction films. So I decided to terminate my development of Tristan and Iseult.”
Around the same time he cancelled his sophomore project, the moviemaker received a script which allowed him to find out whether or not his belief in the science fiction genre was well-founded.
Part two
Please take the time to vote in our poll with your favourite Ridley Scott movie.
Short Film Showcase - Boy and Bicycle (1965)
DVD Giveaway - Blade Runner: The Final Cut
For more on Ridley Scott visit RSA Films, or read our Five Essential Films of Ridley Scott.
The profile has also been republished as part of the Ridley Scott blogathon at Seeti Maar - Diary of a Movie Lover.
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 16/04/10
UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 16th - Sunday 18th April 2010.
After a heavy promotional campaign Dear John tops the UK box office in its opening week, with advance previews on Wednesday and Thursday helping the the Channing Tatum - Amanda Seyfried romantic drama to a five-day haul just shy of £2m.
This gives us the lowest weekend for a number one film since A Christmas Carol topped the chart in early December and pushes 3D hits Clash of the Titans and How To Train Your Dragon down into second and third respectively. However, both of those managed to outperform over the Friday-to-Saturday period with Dear John banking just £1.27m in that same time.
Two other new releases make their debut in the chart this week with Roman Polanski's latest offering - political thriller The Ghost - opening in sixth ahead of British comedy Cemetery Junction from directors Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant. A seventh-placed opening for Cemetery Junction must be disappointing for the creators of The Office, especially when you take into account advance screenings totalling £209k which helps massage the weekend figures.
Elsewhere both Kick-Ass and Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang fall once place each to fourth and fifth, while Alice in Wonderland, The Blind Side and Remember Me all slide towards the foot of the chart as a result of the new releases. However one film which failed to make an impact this past weekend was the sci-fi thriller Repo Men, which opened to just £183k despite the presence of Jude Law in the lead role.
Number one this time last year: Monsters vs Aliens
Incoming...
Another two films look to take advantage of Wednesday releases this week with Bend It Like Beckham director Gurinder Chadha unleashing her new comedy It's A Wonderful Afterlife (cert. 12A) [watch the trailer] alongside the Steve Carell - Tina Fey rom-com Date Night (cert. 15), with both films likely to challenge for top spot.
Friday sees the release of Mike Judge comedy Extract (cert. 15), drama The Joneses (cert,. 15) and another rom-com, When in Rome (cert. PG), while those looking for something a bit more bloody can opt for Geordie director Neil Marshall's latest, Roman actioner Centurion (cert. 15).
U.K. Box Office Archive
After a heavy promotional campaign Dear John tops the UK box office in its opening week, with advance previews on Wednesday and Thursday helping the the Channing Tatum - Amanda Seyfried romantic drama to a five-day haul just shy of £2m.
This gives us the lowest weekend for a number one film since A Christmas Carol topped the chart in early December and pushes 3D hits Clash of the Titans and How To Train Your Dragon down into second and third respectively. However, both of those managed to outperform over the Friday-to-Saturday period with Dear John banking just £1.27m in that same time.
Two other new releases make their debut in the chart this week with Roman Polanski's latest offering - political thriller The Ghost - opening in sixth ahead of British comedy Cemetery Junction from directors Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant. A seventh-placed opening for Cemetery Junction must be disappointing for the creators of The Office, especially when you take into account advance screenings totalling £209k which helps massage the weekend figures.
Elsewhere both Kick-Ass and Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang fall once place each to fourth and fifth, while Alice in Wonderland, The Blind Side and Remember Me all slide towards the foot of the chart as a result of the new releases. However one film which failed to make an impact this past weekend was the sci-fi thriller Repo Men, which opened to just £183k despite the presence of Jude Law in the lead role.
Number one this time last year: Monsters vs Aliens
Pos. | Film | Weekend Gross | Week | Total UK Gross |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Dear John | £1,995,301 | 1 | £1,995,301 |
2 | Clash of the Titans | £1,557,034 | 3 | £16,273,543 |
3 | How To Train Your Dragon | £1,282,519 | 3 | £13,089,419 |
4 | Kick-Ass | £910,453 | 3 | £9,040,664 |
5 | Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang | £866,940 | 4 | £14,566,583 |
6 | The Ghost | £853,679 | 1 | £853,679 |
7 | Cemetery Junction | £641,218 | 1 | £641,218 |
8 | Alice in Wonderland | £498,948 | 7 | £41,423,309 |
9 | The Blind Side | £299,079 | 4 | £5,630,136 |
10 | Remember Me | £225,397 | 3 | £3,363,390 |
Incoming...
Another two films look to take advantage of Wednesday releases this week with Bend It Like Beckham director Gurinder Chadha unleashing her new comedy It's A Wonderful Afterlife (cert. 12A) [watch the trailer] alongside the Steve Carell - Tina Fey rom-com Date Night (cert. 15), with both films likely to challenge for top spot.
Friday sees the release of Mike Judge comedy Extract (cert. 15), drama The Joneses (cert,. 15) and another rom-com, When in Rome (cert. PG), while those looking for something a bit more bloody can opt for Geordie director Neil Marshall's latest, Roman actioner Centurion (cert. 15).
U.K. Box Office Archive
Monday, April 19, 2010
Han to shoot first in HD - Star Wars Blu-ray on the way
Some massive news today for fans of a Galaxy Far, Far Away with confirmation from Lucasfilm representative and legendary Star Wars collector Steve Sansweet that a high-definition Blu-ray release of the saga is on the cards in the not too distant future.
Steve, who was attending the Chicago Comic & Entertainment Expo at the weekend, spoke to IGN.com about the hotly anticipated releases...
I'd be surprised to see individual releases, but the potential for an exhaustive (and expensive) Star Wars box-set is mind-boggling.
What price on The Star Wars Holiday Special as an extra feature? Come on, it's the only way it'll ever see the light of day...
Sansweet also spoke to Jason and Jimmy of ForceCast and discussed a host of topics including new merchandise, Star Wars Lego 3, The Force Unleashed 2, Star Wars in Concert and the upcoming animated comedy series. Listen to the podcast.
Related:
Ten Essential Star Wars Bit Parts
Bringing Star Wars to the Screen: Episode IV – A New Hope
Bringing Star Wars to the Screen: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back
Bringing Star Wars to the Screen: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi
Bringing Star Wars to the Small Screen: The Star Wars Holiday Special
Steve, who was attending the Chicago Comic & Entertainment Expo at the weekend, spoke to IGN.com about the hotly anticipated releases...
"We have been at work for a couple of years working on—I won't call it the Ultimate Set because we keep finding stuff—but, a very full set of all six movies on Blu-ray with lots of extra material. We're finding all kinds of scenes from dailies that have never been seen before. Beyond all of those things that you know about… there are some real treasures."With Blu-ray having achieved a decisive victory of HD-DVD in the format war this news is certainly long overdue and the talk of previously unseen material is sure to get fans jumping with excitement, although let's hope that Lucas hasn't turned into a kid in a candy store and tinkered even further.
I'd be surprised to see individual releases, but the potential for an exhaustive (and expensive) Star Wars box-set is mind-boggling.
What price on The Star Wars Holiday Special as an extra feature? Come on, it's the only way it'll ever see the light of day...
Sansweet also spoke to Jason and Jimmy of ForceCast and discussed a host of topics including new merchandise, Star Wars Lego 3, The Force Unleashed 2, Star Wars in Concert and the upcoming animated comedy series. Listen to the podcast.
Related:
Ten Essential Star Wars Bit Parts
Bringing Star Wars to the Screen: Episode IV – A New Hope
Bringing Star Wars to the Screen: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back
Bringing Star Wars to the Screen: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi
Bringing Star Wars to the Small Screen: The Star Wars Holiday Special
Friday, April 16, 2010
Movies... For Free! Silent Night, Bloody Night (1974)
Showcasing classic movies that have fallen out of copyright and are available freely from the public domain (with streaming video!)...
Silent Night, Bloody Night, 1974.
Directed by Theodore Gershuny.
Starring Patrick O'Neal, James Patterson, Mary Woronov and John Carradine.
Not to be confused with 1984's Christmas-themed slasher Silent Night, Deadly Night, this low-budget horror from director Theodore Gershuny centres on an old New England mansion and former asylum which has been put on the market by Jeffrey Butler (Tony Award winning actor James Patterson in his final role), the grandson of its original owner. When news of the impending sale reaches a nearby mental hospital it inspires a deranged serial killer to escape and take up residence, with business soon picking up for the local morgue.
Originally completed in 1972 (two years prior to another Yuletide horror Black Christmas, which shares a number of elements), Silent Night, Bloody Night was produced by Troma co-founder Lloyd Kaufman and features a strong cast including Patrick O'Neal, John Carradine (and 'Warhol Superstar' Mary Woronov. Although the film achieved only modest success during its initial drive-in run it is an enjoyable and atmospheric horror, with an eerie extended flashback sequence detailing the mansion's macabre history standing out as a highlight.
After slipping into obscurity for a time after its release, Silent Night, Bloody Night enjoyed renewed attention when it featured on the popular comedy series Elvira's Movie Macabre in 1981 and it has since went on to gain a cult following.
Embed courtesy of Internet Archive.
Click here to view all entries in our Movies... For Free! collection.
Silent Night, Bloody Night, 1974.
Directed by Theodore Gershuny.
Starring Patrick O'Neal, James Patterson, Mary Woronov and John Carradine.
Not to be confused with 1984's Christmas-themed slasher Silent Night, Deadly Night, this low-budget horror from director Theodore Gershuny centres on an old New England mansion and former asylum which has been put on the market by Jeffrey Butler (Tony Award winning actor James Patterson in his final role), the grandson of its original owner. When news of the impending sale reaches a nearby mental hospital it inspires a deranged serial killer to escape and take up residence, with business soon picking up for the local morgue.
Originally completed in 1972 (two years prior to another Yuletide horror Black Christmas, which shares a number of elements), Silent Night, Bloody Night was produced by Troma co-founder Lloyd Kaufman and features a strong cast including Patrick O'Neal, John Carradine (and 'Warhol Superstar' Mary Woronov. Although the film achieved only modest success during its initial drive-in run it is an enjoyable and atmospheric horror, with an eerie extended flashback sequence detailing the mansion's macabre history standing out as a highlight.
After slipping into obscurity for a time after its release, Silent Night, Bloody Night enjoyed renewed attention when it featured on the popular comedy series Elvira's Movie Macabre in 1981 and it has since went on to gain a cult following.
Embed courtesy of Internet Archive.
Click here to view all entries in our Movies... For Free! collection.
Results of our Hong Kong Action DVD giveaway...
And the winners are...
These past few weeks we've been running our latest DVD giveaway with some classic Hong Kong action movies up for grabs. Well, the contest is now closed and all that remains is to announce the lucky recipients...
Stewart Miller - Infernal Affairs
Rebecca Murphy - Infernal Affairs
Johan Slotte - The Killer
Bob Slipper - Fist of Fury
Thanks to everyone who entered and left comments and be sure to check back soon for more DVD giveaways.
Related:
Five Essential... Hong Kong Action Stars
World Cinema: The Hong Kong Film Industry
These past few weeks we've been running our latest DVD giveaway with some classic Hong Kong action movies up for grabs. Well, the contest is now closed and all that remains is to announce the lucky recipients...
Stewart Miller - Infernal Affairs
Rebecca Murphy - Infernal Affairs
Johan Slotte - The Killer
Bob Slipper - Fist of Fury
Thanks to everyone who entered and left comments and be sure to check back soon for more DVD giveaways.
Related:
Five Essential... Hong Kong Action Stars
World Cinema: The Hong Kong Film Industry
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