Tuesday, May 18, 2010

UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 14/05/10

UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 14th - Sunday 16th May 2010.

It may have failed to take the North American crown but Ridley Scott's take on the English legend of Robin Hood enjoys a hefty UK opening to claim top spot in its debut weekend. Reuniting Scott with frequent collaborator and Gladiator leading man Russell Crowe, the film managed an impressive haul of £5.75m despite mixed reviews. Watch the trailer here and be sure to check out Trevor Hogg's comprehensive Ridley Scott profile Hard to Replicate.

With Robin Hood the only new release to chart this week (at the expense of Clash of the Titans), the rest of the top ten looks familiar but there was still time for a bit of a reshuffle. Reigning champion Iron Man 2 slips down into second (becoming the highest grossing film in the chart with a total of £17.9m), while A Nightmare on Elm Street and Hot Tub Time Machine manage to hold firm in third and fourth respectively. Less fortunate however is the family comedy Furry Vengeance, which slips three places to finish fifth in its second weekend.

Elsewhere Chris Morris' Jihad satire Four Lions leads the bottom half of the chart for the second week in a row, with Jennifer Lopez rom-com The Back-Up Plan slipping two places to seventh. Meanwhile How To Train Your Dragon, The Last Song and Date Night all fall one place apiece to round out the foot of the chart.

Number one this time last year: Angels & Demons
















































































Pos.FilmWeekend GrossWeekTotal UK Gross
1Robin Hood
£5,750,3321£5,750,332
2Iron Man 2
£1,595,6123





















































£17,905,902
3A Nightmare on Elm Street
£649,3232































































£2,677,189
4Hot Tub Time Machine
£573,1222































































£1,984,808
5Furry Vengeance£548,4402











































































£2,473,049
6Four Lions
£496,6492£1,444,364
7The Back-Up Plan£478,9172

























































£1,598,989
8How To Train Your Dragon£254,6387















































































£16,729,312
9The Last Song£181,4893









































































£1,832,362
10Date Night£127,7854













































































£3,795,016


Incoming...

This coming Friday sees the release of the latest action blockbuster from Walt Disney Studios and Jerry Bruckheimer films, Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (cert 12A) [watch the trailer here], along with the new Kevin Smith comedy Cop Out (cert. 15) and Werner Herzog crime thriller Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call - New Orleans (cert. 18).

Also hitting screens is the first British film to be shot in the IMAX 3D format, StreetDance 3D (cert. PG), featuring a host of Britain's Got Talent stars including George Sampson, Diversity and Flawless. Sadly, this is likely to enjoy a bumper opening. Meanwhile two other home-grown efforts- thriller Pimp (cert. 18) and horror Heartless (cert. 18) - also make their debut.

U.K. Box Office Archive

Sunday, May 16, 2010

British Cinema: Four Lions (2010)

Four Lions, 2010.

Directed by Chris Morris.
Starring Riz Ahmed, Kayvan Novak, Nigel Lindsay, Adeel Akhtar, Archer Ali and Preeya Kalidas.

Four Lions
SYNOPSIS:

After accidentally killing his own men at a training camp in Pakistan, Omar (Ahmed) returns to England to form a suicide terrorist cell with ideas of blowing up a major British target. Unfortunately his co-conspirators are less than helpful.

Four Lions
At first glance this sounds like a very bad idea; a comedy about five incompetent Jihad suicide bombers attempting to blow themselves up while killing innocent people in London. For some this is going to be too close to the bone and too flippant towards recent events.

Luckily Four Lions proves to be sensitive in its portrayal of this delicate story and does this by humanising the characters without justifying their actions. An effort is made to find a reason for these actions and it is made very clear that the problem stems from a preposterous belief system programmed into them from birth, an idea perfectly illustrated in a scene between Omar and his son, where he compares the Lion King to their fight against the west. The first reaction is to laugh at the absurdity of such a scenario but that’s until you realise the plausibility of it. How else would people become so convinced that becoming suicide bombers is the best course of action for their fight against western civilisation?

This scene perfectly demonstrates the balance of comedy and pathos and those expecting a laugh riot in the style of Chris Morris’ television projects will likely be disappointed. Considering the obviously controversial subject matter; there is a surprisingly gentle tone and this is down to both Morris’ unobtrusive direction and the strength of the main performances.

Riz Ahmed as Omar is possibly the reason the film is as successful as it is. While handling the comedy well, which ranges from sharp wit to Spinal Tap absurdity, he provides the viewer with a window to a world we have been accustomed to hate and fear. Instead of playing Omar as a highly organised, sadistic, one-dimensional villain, he emphasises the character’s confusion and frustration. Witness the scene where he’s trying to get his friend Waj (played brilliantly by Kayvan Novak) to embrace his cause. Not only does he get Waj confused; but himself as well. Somehow trying to teach others what they are doing is right manages to convince himself of the opposite.

The danger with all this however is that the film could easily have copped out and not been as forthright as it ultimately is, or worse could have let the main protagonists off the hook. Fortunately the writers and director have the courage of their convictions and without spoiling anything, any worry you may have over the maker’s political leanings can be quickly put aside by the time the end credits role up.

All of this makes it sound like a worthier and more subdued experience than it actually is, but there are some very funny moments. Obvious examples are the bickering between the five (yes five, the title will make sense when you watch the film) guys, mostly over what needs to be bombed (one suggestion includes mini babybel), how to sit in the videos outlining their demands, trying to get one of the team to punch themselves in the face and most importantly why bombing a Mosque will help rather than hinder their cause.

However the overriding sensation on leaving the cinema will most likely he one of sadness rather than elation and considering the subject matter that is entirely appropriate.

David Bishop

Movie Review Archive

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Short Film Showcase - Xenogenesis (1978)

Xenogenesis, 1978.

Written and Directed by James Cameron and Randall Frakes.
Starring William Wisher Jr. and Margaret Undiel.

After dropping out of college James Cameron was approached by a group of dentists looking to invest in a film as a tax write-off. Cameron pitched an idea that would become his debut short, Xenogenesis, and was given $20,000 to produce a teaser trailer. Using the funds, Cameron and co-director Randall Frakes (writer of the 1988 cult classic Hell Comes to Frogtown) delivered a twelve minute short which would incorporate numerous themes and elements prevalent in his later work.

Shot on 35mm, Xenogenesis tells the story of a man and woman tasked with searching out new worlds capable of supporting life. Exploring their huge sentient space-ship, they stumble upon a hostile robot (reminiscent of Terminator's Hunter-Killers) and must fight for their survival. In addition to writing and directing, Cameron handled set design, cinematography, editing and visual effects, which led to him gaining employment as a model sculptor with legendary B-movie producer Roger Corman's New World Pictures.

Xenogenesis:


Embed courtesy of DailyMotion.

Related:
Resurfacing: A James Cameron Profile

Click here to view more short films and public domain features.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Thoughts on... Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus (2009)

Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus, 2009.

Directed by Jack Perez (as Ace Hannah).
Starring Deborah Gibson, Lorenzo Lamas, Vic Chao, Sean Lawlor and Jay Beyers.


SYNOPSIS:

When two enormous prehistoric creatures contend for supremacy of the sea, the California coast becomes the setting for a showdown that's been centuries in the making.


When you give your film a name like Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus and your premise is that a really big shark and a really big octopus were frozen for millions of years and have now unfrozen so they can finish their fight in our time, you’d think you wouldn’t take it too seriously. I know I wouldn’t.

But The Asylum appear to be taking this film seriously. It’s almost unbelievable to watch. Not one hint of irony about the whole thing, not one slither of self parody, just a big lump of terrible film. And that is just the start of their problems.

It’s not the most professional thing for me to do, but I’m going to compare this film to better films in order to show exactly where they went wrong.

Remember in It Came From Beneath The Sea (1955) where the mutated octopus attacks the Golden Gate Bridge? Remember how that was built up to be an amazing spectacle? How they gradually built it up and then showed just how devastating the beast truly was? How we had to sit through the slow destruction of a well known landmark making it all the more effective? Well the producers of Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus have either not seen the film or felt like copying it. If it’s the former, then shame on them for not researching previous monster movies. And if it’s the latter, which I suspect, then they did a dreadful job of copying it.

I’ve not seen the “script”, but I imagine that scene looked like this:

EXT. SEA – DAY

The Shark swims towards the GOLDEN GATE BRIDGE.

INT. ARMY BASE – DAY

A guy on a radar points at it.

RADAR GUY
Oh my god! He’s heading for the bridge!

EXT. GOLDEN GATE BRIDGE

The Shark jumps up and bites the bridge.

INT. ARMY BASE – DAY

They all look sad.
CUT TO:

That’s it. An iconic scene from the Ray Harryhausen back catalogue copied poorly and butchered by a bunch of amateur hacks in about 4 shots. This is common with all of the destruction scenes in the film. In one scene, the octopus destroys an oil rig, but you would barely know because it’s skipped over so quickly and badly edited.

Remember how in Freddy vs. Jason (Yu, 2003) where they spent the entire movie building up to the final showdown between the two characters that feature in the title of the film? Remember how they spent a lot of time on that fight so the people got exactly what they paid to see? Well, it seems the Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus team didn’t get that memo on how to build up anticipation.

Our title characters are frozen mid-fight millions of years ago. They then get unfrozen in our time. You’d have thought they’d have come out with their gloves on ready for round 2. But it takes almost the entire movie for the scientists (they must be scientists, they’re wearing lab coats) to work out that in order to defeat them, they should make them fight each other. So instead of building up to a final showdown, we just get various piss poor set pieces of the two giants destroying various things with various bad CG shots that culminate in a terrible fight scene.

The fight scene itself can also be summed up in a short number of shots. I won’t bother scripting it out because I don’t think they did. But it’s over in a couple of moves and all those moves are the same. It’s really bad.

Remember how in Terror of MechaGodzilla (1975) the premise of the film was a giant monster fighting a giant robot version of himself? Remember how that could have appeared really silly but they made up for it by having an interesting and intriguing subplot that built up the main plot to be more credible? Well, Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus does a similar thing.

I’m joking. They did nothing of the sort. Because this film is awful.

It has one plot that moves along at the pace of a legless man in a 100 meter dash. It’s so boring and laborious that it’s hard to even write about. The plot isn’t all that engaging and the terrible acting and script do nothing to help it.

But what really grinds my gears is still that the film appears to be taking itself seriously. C’mon! You’re film is called Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus. You are not making Ben Hur (1959). You didn’t see the makers of Snakes on a Plane (2006) or Eight Legged Freaks (2002) pulling this kind of brain dead stunt did you? No. Because they knew that they were making a cheeky little monster movie with their tongues placed firmly in their cheeks. These morons appear have their heads stuck up their own arses.

This film is horrible. It’s boring, the story sucks, the action is rubbish, the CGI is horrendous, the acting is atrocious, the soundtrack is lame, the camera work is awful, the editing is terrible, the direction is non-existence and the overall presentation is abysmal. Avoid at all costs.

Comments and suggestions to boddicker_scripts@yahoo.co.uk or visit my website www.boddicker-scripts.moonfruit.com

Luke Owen
“Welcome to prime time bitch!” – Freddy Krueger, Nightmare on Elm Street Part 3: The Dream Warriors (Russell, 1987)

Movie Review Archive

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

World Cinema: Lebanon (2009)

Lebanon, 2009.

Written & Directed by Samuel Maoz.
Starring Yoav Donat, Zohar Shtrauss, Oshri Cohen.

Lebanon poster
SYNOPSIS:

It's 1982, and the First Lebanon War has just begun. New gunner Shmulik (Yoav Donat) is assigned to a tank team led by Assi (Itay Tiran) along with Hertzel (Oshri Cohen) the shell loader and Yigal (Michael Moshonov) the driver. We follow them as they are despatched to clear a town after a bombing.

Lebanon
There are only two external shots in this film, bookending the feature at the start and end, both shots being of a field of wilting sunflowers on a clear day. Tranquil, picturesque scenes, perhaps to contrast with the horrific images of war sandwiched between.

Almost the entirety of the film takes place within the tank Shmulik and the rest of his team command. The inside is cramped, filthy, hot and waterlogged, with steam or smoke rising from the driver’s chair when the engine is stopped and started. A pool of stagnant water in the bottom has extinguished cigarettes floating in it. The characters are exhausted, both mentally and physically, with both tank conditions to deal with and explosions and gunfire rattling off its metal shell. By setting almost all of the film inside the tank, we truly feel the claustrophobia of the characters.

The only external shots from the tank are through the cross hairs of the gunner, so namely, we only see Shmulik’s POV. This has several contextual layers, as we have ourselves as the viewers of the violence, standing in for Shmulik. Outside characters stare into the camera, into the gun turret, and it looks like they are staring right at us or Shmulik, not the cold, faceless front of the tank. The crosshairs add an element of automatic aggression, that whatever we are looking at, be it an innocent civilian or a potential enemy, with just a pull of a trigger could be obliterated. In certain scenes, (the first time Shmulik fires the cannon, the women who has lost her child) characters look into the turret, at us, with questioning or even accusatory stares, engaging the viewer completely. You literally feel like a member of the tank crew, trapped inside and fighting for survival.

The innocence of the young soldiers is always on display, in that they are quickly being corrupted and infected by the horrors of war. Shmulik fails to fire the tank cannon when ordered, leading to a fellow soldier being killed and when he finally does he causes the death of a chicken farmer, who is shown brutally severed from his arms and legs, screaming in pain. Gamil grants the civilian a mercy death, before staring into the turret / at Shmulik. Shmulik exclaims, “I've only ever shot barrels before”, illustrating just how unprepared the soldiers are. After the dead soldier is deposited in the tank with them while awaiting a helicopter, Shmulik looks at his hands, covered in the dead soldier's blood – a very literal metaphor, but also one that poses one of the key questions of the film (and of war itself), that of responsibility. Shmulik does cause death and injury when he fires the gun, but he is following orders. Later on he questions tank captain Assi, “You have a trigger don’t you?”. He even suggests that he line up the shot and Assi be the one who pulls the trigger, transferring the ultimate responsibility to the one actual giving the order.

The tank itself is referred to almost as a living entity, spluttering away when started, belching smoke and steam and whining as the turret is moved. After sustaining a bazooka hit, the tank starts to ooze oil and fluid, dripping down the metal walls and dials, giving the impression that it is actually bleeding. Driver Yigal states that it is 'dead' when he cannot get it to start and the dials are not reading.

From a technical viewpoint, the film is simply superb. The cinematography is excellent, switching between tank turret POV, with the crosshairs centre screen and realistically jerky movements of the turret as it moves adding real authenticity. The shots inside the tank feature tight camera work and face close-ups, and truly succeed in transferring the claustrophobia of the tank.

The sound design itself is worthy of awards, with bullets ricocheting off the metal shell, explosions deafening and shouts echoing. We hear more of the outside environment than we actually see, especially impressive when you consider that the inside was in fact a set, yet the outside seems utterly tangible. The sound for the tank is also very impressive, with an electrical whine every time the turret moves and the loud chugging of the engine providing absolute realism.

It took writer and director Samuel Maoz twenty-five years to turn his own experiences as a gunner in a tank crew into this feature, with Shmulik’s character a virtual stand in for Samuel. He’s stated that “…it was probably a need, not to forgive myself necessarily, but... I was involved in the war and that in itself is enough for me to feel guilty to an extent.” The film was not so much made as a ‘cleansing process’ for the director (as one would assume), but more as a responsibility to tell the story.

The realism of the film-making, coupled with the knowledge that not only were these real events but actually experiences of the director, make Lebanon one of the most powerful war films in recent memory. By focusing on these four characters and the ethical and personal crises they face, the film provides an objective but deeply personal image of war. It manages to do this not by glamorising the events or converting them into entertainment, but simply by telling the story through the eyes of four frightened, humane characters.

Roger Holland

Movie Review Archive

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Hard to Replicate: A Ridley Scott Profile (Part 4)

Trevor Hogg profiles the career of filmmaker Ridley Scott in the fourth of a five part feature... read parts one, two and three.

Jean-Leon Gerome Pollice VersoProducing an historic epic about a disgraced Roman general who seeks to reclaim his honour by becoming a Coliseum fighter was not originally Ridley Scott’s idea. “I was approached by Walter Parkes [WarGames] and DreamWorks,” recounted the British director. “Walter, one of the great story pitchers, preceded his remarks by presenting a reproduction of a nineteenth century painting by the artist [Jean-Léon] Gérôme. It showed a Roman arena from the level of the sand, where a gladiator holding a weapon was standing over his vanquished foe, looking up at an emperor who was staring down at them and preparing to give the thumbs down gesture. Walter really had me the second he showed me the painting.”

Impressed with the footage from Jake Scott’s feature film debut, Plunkett and Macleane (1999), the British moviemaker recruited his son’s cinematographer who had been working for Black Dog (a music video company owned by the Scotts). “I didn’t want to just shoot the battle sequences for Gladiator in a traditional manner, so we adopted various styles which John [Mathieson] and I talked about. We used various techniques in terms of cameras and camera speeds. When you’ve got two thousand soldiers in the field at any one time and you’re planning to experiment, you’d better make sure you’re right, because you can’t go back and reshoot it.” The reason for adopting an unconventional shooting approach for the fighting sequences was a pragmatic choice on the part of the director. “People get tired of watching [the same kinds] of medieval battles, or any battle scenes that have run dry. I think Steven Spielberg did an incredible twelve minutes [in the opening scene] of Saving Private Ryan [1998]; that sequence felt absolutely real and documentary. He raised the stakes in terms of the film interpretation of what that experience might be like.”

“[Sir Lawrence] Alma-Tedema, who was painting Greek, Roman and Egyptian environments with great perception and accuracy, was a big reference,” answered Ridley Scott when asked about the look of the movie released in 2000. “It then fell to me to say, ‘Rome was the Golden City, but it was probably dirty and grim in parts, despite the architecture.’” Following in the footsteps of Hollywood classics Ben-Hur (1959), Spartacus (1960), and The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964) was a creative challenge for the South Shields-native. “The question is, when you bring a different eye to the time period and [shoot in a] different decade will the picture look different than previous films? Absolutely. I think through production design, we got an interesting view of Roman life that I’m very happy with.”

Gladiator Ridley ScottSelected to play the title character of General Maximus Dacimus Meridus was Australian actor Russell Crowe (L.A. Confidential). “Russell is a collaborator,” enthused Scott. “He brings a great deal to the table when he takes on a role, really gives it his all and has a lot of ideas. As soon as we cast him as Maximus, he started reading Marcus Arrelius’ writings and familiarizing himself with the history of the Roman Empire. He’s very well read on a lot of other subjects, as well.” Cast in the part of the mentor Antonius Proximo is British acting veteran Oliver Reed (The Three Musketeers). “Oliver was what I’d call a charming scoundrel. He was a wonderful actor, incredibly intense. I knew for that role I needed a Robert Shaw-type actor who was as tough as nails, but also had a sensitive side.” With three weeks left in principle photography Reed died causing the director to improvise with the aid of digital technology. “I had to shoot most of his scenes at the end of the film using his body double, then for close-ups we superimposed Oliver’s face onto the body double.” Ridley Scott went on to add, “Oliver went out the way he would have wanted to, I should think, with a pint glass in his hand.”

Other members of the cast included Richard Harris (A Man Named Horse), Connie Nielsen (Basic), Derek Jacobi (Gosford Park), Djimon Housnou (Blood Diamond), David Hemmings (Last Orders), and Joaquin Phoenix (Walk the Line) who portrays the ruthless and scheming Emperor Commodus. “I had a very specific interpretation of the way I wanted to play it,” said Phoenix, “but at first I didn’t know if that would fit in with the rest of the characters in the film as a whole. Commodus is certainly a man-child, and he was a neglected child. It was very important for me to illustrate that in certain ways. His reactions to the combats in the arena – it’s almost as if he doesn’t comprehend what human life is; people are merely toys for his enjoyment.”

Gladiator was a global sensation, quadrupling its $103 million production budget by earning $458 million in worldwide box office receipts. The Academy Awards lauded the film with Best Picture, Best Actor (Crowe), Best Visual Effects, Best Costume Design, and Best Sound; other nominations included Best Supporting Actor (Phoenix) and Best Director. The Golden Globes awarded the historical epic with Best Picture – Drama, and Best Original Score, and at the BAFTAs, Gladiator competed in fourteen categories winning for Best Cinematography, Best Editing, Best Film, and Best Production Design; for his work behind the camera, Ridley Scott was nominated for the David Lean Award for Direction.

Hannibal Ridley Scott“Each time, I search for a fresh experience and a fresh meaning,” explained the director about his method of selecting projects. “They say that nothing’s really new anymore, that there are only seven stories in the world, which sounds rather depressing, but I’ve got a funny feeling it’s more or less accurate. Fundamentally, you still have the good guy or the bad guy. So it’s got to be about the way you look at things.” Turned down by American moviemaker Jonathan Demme (Philadelphia), Italian producer Dino De Laurentiis (The Bounty) approached Scott who agreed to provide his own perspective on the iconic villain reprised by Oscar-winner Anthony Hopkins (Howard’s End). “The Silence of the Lambs [1989] was so good I couldn’t forget it. But Hannibal [2001] takes on a life of its own. It’s not really picking up right after Silence left off. It’s ten years later and the character [of Hannibal Lecter] is entirely different. I don’t even think of it as a sequel. It goes in such a different direction.”

Serial killer Dr. Hannibal Lecter (Hopkins) is hunted by Mason Verger (Gary Oldman), a sadistic pedophile whom he disfigured but failed to kill years ago. Ridley Scott had issues with the “love story” conclusion in the six-hundred page novel which sees Lecter slip away romantically with FBI Special Agent Clarice Starling. “We adjusted the ending, while capturing the essence of the book,” declared the filmmaker. “I couldn’t take that quantum leap emotionally on behalf of Starling. Certainly on the behalf of Hannibal – I’m sure that’s been on the back of his mind for a number of years but for Starling, no. I think one of the attractions about Starling to Hannibal is what a straight arrow she is.”

Screenwriter Ted Tally who had worked on The Silence of the Lambs with Jonathan Demme declined the offer to work on the sequel; so did Steve Zaillian (Schindler’s List) who reconsidered his stance when he was approached a second time. “I found out that David Mamet [Glengarry Glen Ross] was working on it, recalled Zaillian, and I started to feel like, ‘What sort of jerk am I?’”; he agreed with one condition. The ending had to be reworked. Steve Zaillian, Ridley Scott, and author Thomas Harris spent four days brainstorming at the Beverly Hills Hotel. “I think the ending is more tonal as to what could possibly be in her [Starling’s] mind at that moment,” said Ridley Scott who soon found himself having to recast the role which was embodied by Jodie Foster (Little Man Tate).

Foster’s rejection to participate in the sequel led to speculation that not enough money was being offered to lure her or that she simply disliked the book. Universal’s president of production Kevin Misher found himself faced with an awkward situation, “It was one of those moments when you sit down and think, ‘Can Clarice be looked upon as James Bond, for instance? A character who is replaceable. Or was Jodie Foster Clarice Starling and the audience will not accept [anyone else]?’” A-list actresses Cate Blanchett (The Shipping News), Angelina Jolie (Girl, Interrupted), Hilary Swank (Boys Don’t Cry), Ashley Judd (Double Jeopardy), and Julianne Moore (Boogie Nights) were seen as possible replacement candidates. Scott selected Moore because she had “a certain kind of gravitas, an intelligence which is very similar [to Jodie Foster’s]”.

“I just learned the lines and showed up and walked around as Hannibal Lecter,” stated Anthony Hopkins who divorced himself from the preproduction turmoil; he was concerned about a more pressing creative challenge. “I thought, ‘Do I repeat that performance, or do I vary it?’”, revealed Hopkins. “Ten years have passed so I changed it a bit because I’ve changed.” Dr. Hannibal Lecter may be “a bit mellower” in the words of the acclaimed British actor, however, his methods remain brutal as with the brain eating scene involving Starling’s nemesis Paul Krendler (Ray Liotta). “He seems to be a popular cult figure,” amused Anthony Hopkins. “I don’t know if that makes the whole world crazy, but…there are dark sides to human nature.” Despite the absence of Ted Tally, Jonathan Demme, and Jodie Foster, Hannibal was a worldwide success grossing $352 million in box office receipts, while costing $87 million to make.

Black Hawk Down Ridley ScottJournalist Mark Bowden’s chronicle about the fatal misadventures of a group U.S. Special Forces units assigned to capture two lieutenants of Somali warlord Mohammad Farrah Aidid served as the source material for the second film released by Ridley Scott in 2001, Black Hawk Down. "I never do anything that I can’t repeat,” confessed the filmmaker when describing his trade secrets in cinematically faking an explosion. “When you see those RPGs fly – that’s a rocket-propelled grenade – they’re basically a cylinder that is turned on a lathe in polystyrene with a small weight in its nose and a radio-controlled rocket on the back…It runs along a wire [which cannot be seen] like a model.”

Getting the permission to shoot in Morocco as well as the necessary U.S. military equipment was not a simple task. “You go through the king first, and the Defense Department,” began Scott. “It got as high up as [American Secretary of State] Colin Powell at one point to get those helicopters. So we’re dealing with a very high level to start with. And then you go through the governor of the town and then the mayor of the district. And then that melts down into the local committees and…permission.” The whole process took four months. Other things happening simultaneously were the selection of the street locations, and casting auditions in the Congo, Sudan, Somalia, and Ethiopia for two thousand extras.

“One of the reasons to do the film was to make it as accurate as I could possibly understand it to be,” said Ridley Scott. “Those Black Hawks as you can imagine, with their full load and compliment of technology, are very valuable, as are the little birds with their compliment of gear, which includes mini-guns [like Gatling guns].” An American military condition arose which almost scuttled the project. “They wanted one hundred and thirty personnel to accompany the machines. Thirty five of them are actual [U.S. Army] Rangers,” groaned the moviemaker. “Suddenly, the wrinkle that comes into it is that it has to go through the king’s departments of whatever his bureaucracy is at that moment and they’re saying, ‘You mean we’re going to have one hundred and thirty-five armed troops in here and thirty five are Rangers? And I’ve got eight fully-armed attack helicopters?’ This is getting embarrassing.”

“Those pilots that you see [in the film], none of that is special effects,” remarked Scott about the dramatic helicopter footage. “All that happens, where they go down the street, land in the street and take off. That’s all real. And those big birds hanging over the top of the buildings and holding their position then moving off, and then even the big birds when they’re in trouble and they’re spinning backwards, that’s all flying.” The Black Hawk crash sequences were not entirely without special effects. “It only kicks in with CGI [computer-generated images], which is the tricky stuff, from the moment it [the helicopter] clips the top of the building.”

“There’s an absolute line of where you will not have somebody in front of a gun being fired with a certain kind of blank in it,” stated the filmmaker of the safety precautions taken during the principal photography. “There were absolutely no accidents whatsoever. The only thing that drove me crazy was when you would shout, ‘Cut, cut, cut!’ and anybody who had a full magazine of brass casings wouldn’t stop. They kept firing because they just loved to fire the guns. It’s spooky how people like to fire guns.” Featured in the large ensemble cast for the picture are Josh Hartnett (Lucky Number Slevin), Ewan McGregor (Moulin Rouge!), Jason Issacs (The Patriot), Tom Sizemore (Heat), William Fichtner (Strange Days), Eric Bana (Munich), Sam Sheppard (The Right Stuff), Orlando Bloom (Ned Kelly), Jeremy Piven (Grosse Pointe Blank), and Hugh Dancy (Adam).

Though the $93 million production of Black Hawk Down could not compete with Hannibal at the worldwide box office (earning $173 million), the film excelled in the awards circuit; it won Oscars for Best Editing and Best Sound along with receiving nominations for Best Director and Best Cinematography. At the BAFTAs, the film was a contender for Best Cinematography, Best Editing, and Best Sound. The American Film Institute nominated the picture for Cinematographer, Editor, Movie, Production Designer and Director – of the Year. Scriptwriter Ken Nolan contended for Best Adapted Screenplay at the Writer’s Guild of America Awards, while Ridley Scott received a Director’s Guild of America Awards nomination.

Boy and Bicycle (1961) was released in a video collection known as Cinema16: British Short Films (2003) and its creator attended a ceremony held at Buckingham Palace where he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II. “As a boy growing up in South Shields,” marveled Ridley Scott, “I could never have imagined that I would receive such a special recognition.”

Matchstick MenVenturing into the genre of comedy, the director adapted the novel Matchstick Men (2003) by Eric Garcia for the big screen. Con-man Roy Waller (Nicolas Cage), who suffers from an obsessive-compulsive disorder, has his organized existence turned upside down upon learning that he has a daughter (Alison Lohman). Commenting on the abilities of his Oscar-winning leading man, Scott stated, “He definitely has a chameleon quality that not too many have. They try, but Nic really succeeds at extremities from shooting guns to rolling cars to playing an alcoholic in Leaving Las Vegas [1995] or comedy in Adaptation [2002].” Making Waller’s mental condition believable in the picture was not a stretch for the filmmaker and his star. “Nic has had some personal experience with it through friends, and I’m a neatnik,” confessed Ridley Scott. “I find neatness comes out of being lazy. It’s actually much easier to be neat than a slob. With a slob eventually you’re going to be walking all over everything. I’m obsessive because it’s easier. I just do it at the moment and get it done.”

“This to me was more like doing Thelma & Louise [1991],” said the moviemaker. “During Thelma & Louise I only left L.A. for three weeks when we went to Moab, Utah; the rest of the time we were in Bakersfield. I loved the script for Matchstick Men and asked [co-screenwriter and producer] Ted Griffin [Ocean’s Eleven] if he had any objections to moving the locations from Philadelphia to the Valley in California.” Scott went on to observe, “Doing what you haven’t done is the key. Shifting gears. Some people always like to do a study of the same thing. John Ford [The Searchers] tended to do a career of Westerns. My career seems to be of nonspecific subjects which are all over the place.”

“Casting is everything,” declared Ridley Scott. “Alison Lohman [Big Fish] and Sam Rockwell [who plays Waller’s grifter partner Frank Mercer] were the best candidates for the roles. It’s a visceral choice. I know if an actor is right for the role from the second they walk through the door.” Alison Lohman, who was in her early twenties at the time, had serious doubts about portraying a teenager. “When I first read the script I was like, ‘No. No way, I’m playing fourteen. You can just pass on this,” confided the actress. “Usually, it’s the first fifty pages and you know. But then reading the whole script for me was like, ‘Okay, I can definitely do this.’” Lohman had nothing but praise for Scott. “He has an energy that lifts you. Any doubt that you had is just gone. You just do it – it’s really simple. It was so easy to work with him.” Other performers featured in the movie which grossed $66 million worldwide are Bruce Altman (Quiz Show), Bruce McGill (Runaway Jury), Jenny O’Hara (Mystic River), Steve Easton (A Man Apart) and Beth Grant (No Country for Old Men).

Kingdom of Heaven“I find that history tends to be more exotic than fiction,” admitted Ridley Scott who chose to explore the era of the medieval Holy Wars in Kingdom of Heaven (2005). “I met the writer Bill Monahan [The Departed], and proposed doing a Crusades film, to which he replied, ‘That’s my subject and my passion. I know all about the whole three hundred years of the Crusades.’ So Bill came back with this idea about the wedge between the first and second crusades where there was this uneasy truce until Saladin was forced to come back and take Jerusalem. We found that the man who surrendered Jerusalem was a local Lord, a Jerusalem citizen called Balian, so we worked fiction backwards into the foothills of the Pyrenees.” Ridley Scott was pleased with the performance of Orlando Bloom who portrays Balian of Ibelin in a cast featuring renowned actors Liam Neeson (Batman Begins) and Jeremy Irons (Reversal of Fortune). “I think he did great in this, it’s a big film to walk into.”

Asked about the historical accuracy of the picture, the filmmaker responded, “Many historians are basing their findings on a priest in France in the fifteenth century writing about events in the thirteenth century. He wasn’t there. So what was he basing his writing on? History is only conjecture.” Working with William Monahan, Ridley Scott attempted to depict an authentic story. “We went to great pains to get this right. All these characters had to be real. Reynald [Brendan Gleason] was a warmonger. Guy de Lusignan [Marton Csokas] was married to Sibylla [Eva Green], the sister of Baldwin the Leper King [Edward Norton], who got leprosy at fifteen. Instead of being asked to step down, he insisted on becoming king. He became impossible to look at by the time he was eighteen and had silver masks made and wore gloves because he was rotting from the inside out. He functioned until he dropped dead at twenty-four. The boy king [Sibylla’s son] was then crowned and Sibylla became the Princess Regent. We know the boy became ill within ten months of being crowned and history states that he was murdered by his mother.” Questioning the theory that Sibylla had killed her own child, Monahan and Scott looked to resolve the issue. “We looked at the possibility he had leprosy,” revealed the moviemaker. “She would have euthenased the boy because of the hideous life that her brother had had over nine or ten years and she was not ready to let her son suffer. That made more sense to us.”

“In all there are about 800 [visual effects] shots,” stated the director who prefers using practical effects. “We built three siege towers. Those [in the end battle] are real. Once you build it, you can clone it much easier. So when you see all that stuff in close-up, and they’re coming up the back, and I’m pulling the towers down, that’s all real – that’s seventeen tons going over. I made four catapults, the trebuchet arms of which would swing fifty-six feet and would flip a hundred-pound ball about four hundred meters.”

Utilizing eleven cameras for the battle scenes as well as two or three cameras for the smaller scenes generated a lot of footage. The first cut of the film was three hours and fifteen minutes long; 20th Century-Fox had Ridley Scott cut it down to two hours and twenty-three minutes for the theatrical release. “The enemy of filmmaking is the preview screening, which influences the final cut,” reflected the director. “It is a tool, but you should use it wisely. The danger is that by the time we reach the preview we have all seen the film so many times we have lost our ability to judge.” Scott regretted complying with the Hollywood studio’s request to significantly shorten the picture; restored in the DVD Director’s Cut version were treasured scenes such as the “whole sequence with the boy king and his mother, Sibylla.”

Kingdom of Heaven was positively received by the Muslim community which pleased Ridley Scott as he views the overlying message of the film to be about tolerance. “In a sentence it’s about accepting another man’s philosophy and religion,” declared the filmmaker of the picture which had a production budget of $130 million and earned $212 million worldwide.

Returning to the world of short films, Ridley co-directed with his daughter Jordan Scott (Cracks) one of the seven segments for the anthology about childhood and exploitation called All the Invisible Children (2005); their effort Jonathan is about a British war photographer (David Thewlis) who looks back on his youth. Other contributors to the project which premiered at the Venice Film Festival were John Woo (Windtalkers) and Spike Lee (The Inside Man).

Next on the cinematic agenda for Ridley Scott was a reunion with an Oscar-winner who traded his signature ancient Roman sword and sandals for a contemporary life on a French vineyard.

Continue to part five.

For more on Ridley Scott visit RSA Films, or check out The Ridley Scott Fan Information Page.

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.

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

UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 07/05/10

UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 7th - Sunday 9th May 2010.

The top ten enjoyed an overhaul this past weekend with five new releases gatecrashing the party but none were able to dislodge reigning box office champion Iron Man 2, which takes the top spot for the second week and increases its total gross to £15m. These are strong numbers for the Marvel sequel; it looks certain to overtake the UK haul of last year's X-Men Origins: Wolverine and should hit the £20m mark by next weekend. Read our review here.

Leading the new releases with £1.77m to take second place is the family comedy Furry Vengeance, while the Platinum Dunes remake of classic horror A Nightmare on Elm Street also breaks the seven figure barrier and nabs third. John Cusack's latest comedy Hot Tub Time Machine opens in fourth [read our review] ahead of rom-com The Back-Up Plan, although the real winner was in sixth with controversial satirist Chris Morris' big-screen directorial debut - the jihad comedy Four Lions - banking £600k despite the least amount of screens of any film in the top ten.

Dropping five places from last week as a result of the new releases and
filling out the remainder of the chart from seventh to tenth are How To Train Your Dragon, The Last Song, Date Night and Clash of the Titans. With Nanny McPhee out of the picture 3D rivals Dragon and Titans have now spent the most weeks on the chart, although it looks likely that Clash of the Titans will have made its last appearance having amassed a 'kraken' £20m in total.

Number one this time last year: Star Trek
















































































Pos.FilmWeekend GrossWeekTotal UK Gross
1Iron Man 2
£3,214,7762£15,090,463
2Furry Vengeance
£1,778,0501





















































£1,778,050
3A Nightmare on Elm Street
£1,342,8371































































£1,342,837
4Hot Tub Time Machine
£904,9591































































£904,959
5The Back-Up Plan
£710,2011











































































£710,201
6Four Lions
£608,6081£608,608
7How To Train Your Dragon£516,1206

























































£16,405,622
8The Last Song£336,8152















































































£1,552,278
9Date Night£336,3453









































































£3,520,884
10Clash of the Titans£291,3526













































































£19,938,794


Incoming...

Ridley Scott's latest historical epic sees him reteam with Gladiator leading man Russell Crowe to bring the legend of Robin Hood (cert. 12A) to the screen and is likely to challenge Iron Man for the top spot when it opens this coming Wednesday. Watch the trailer here.

On Friday fans of world cinema can choose between the highly rated romantic drama Eyes Wide Open (cert. 12A), Israeli war film Lebanon (cert. 15) [view the trailer] and historical biopic Vincere (cert.15), while documentary American: The Bill Hicks Story (cert. 15) also enjoys a limited release.

U.K. Box Office Archive