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The Secrets Behind the Stunning Visual Effects of Blu Wanted Movies



Millar was unhappy with the first draft of the screenplay, considering the approach to be "too tame" and "a little bit Americanized" given he wanted "basically be the opposite of the Spider-Man movie, the idea of someone getting powers and realizing they can do what they want, then choosing the dark path." The author only started to support the direction the project was taking once Bekmambetov "came in with his Eastern European madness" and the intention of coming closer to the spirit of the book.[9] Bekmambetov said that he would take liberty in adapting the comic book's world: "It's difficult for me to just follow. It's interesting for me to create. I feel a little bit different how this world has to be executed."[8] In July 2006, screenwriter Chris Morgan was hired to revise the third act of Haas and Brandt's script.[10]Haas and Brandt returned to refine the character of Wesley Gibson, which they had established in their first draft.[11]




blu Wanted movies



Millar saw previsualized footage of the film and said that it exceeded his expectations for the adaptation.[12] He described its first half as being close to the source comic, and added the ending was similar though it was relocated elsewhere from the comic's original setting. The superhero costumes in the series were also removed, with the exception of the leather attire worn by Wesley and Fox. Incidentally, this had been Millar's intent when writing the miniseries, but he and artist J. G. Jones had forgotten to. Millar said, "I wanted them to have those powers and then just wear those costumes for the initiation, but just for one panel. And then I forgot." Millar also stated that he would have liked to keep the supervillain mythos that dictates the original comic in the film.[9] Millar was favorable to most of the changes in the storyline,[13] which includes the story arc of the Fates issuing death orders in line with the series' original theme of predestination.[14]


James McAvoy, who had screen-tested for the role early in 2006, was initially rejected because the studio was seeking an actor with conventional Hollywood leading man looks and physique. McAvoy was later recalled, being considered to be the "runt of the litter" among those who tested. According to McAvoy, "They [ultimately] wanted someone geeky."[15]McAvoy was cast in the role in October 2006.[16]The Scottish actor, who portrays an American in the film, worked out to improve his physique for the film's action scenes,[17] and suffered several injuries during shooting which included a twisted ankle and an injured knee.[18]


Common became interested in the role of Gunsmith due to both the script and the prospect of working with McAvoy, Jolie, and Morgan Freeman.[23] Common learned a great deal about firearms as preparation for the role, but said he is not a strong supporter of guns in real life.[23][24] Konstantin Khabensky, who starred in Bekmambetov's Night Watch, was cast so that the director would have a familiar face around.[25] British television veteran Marc Warren agreed to work in the film because he always wanted to be in a Hollywood blockbuster.[26] Thomas Kretschmann originally intended to pick up the comic series after being cast, but Bekmambetov convinced him not to. Kretschmann said that he undertook "excessive gun training" to "make sure I look good and I look like I know what I'm doing".[27] Kristen Hager originally auditioned for Fox, but accepted the role of Cathy, considering it "fun to play".[28]


Blu-ray, the standard for high quality home cinema, has generally adhered to a maximum bit rate of about 40Mbits/s for 1080P movies. However, with the recently release of Ultra HD Blu-ray, which features 4K playback, movies can use bit rates as high as 128Mbits/s.


Moviegoers showed themselves to be a little more sophisticated than the pundits predicted over the weekend by crowning WALL-E box office champion with a very healthy $62.5 million opening weekend, according to Disney's Sunday estimate.That's a huge start for a supposedley hard-to-sell movie -- on par with the debut of Monsters, Inc. -- and likely to end up the third or fourth best opening in Pixar's history (see complete list of Pixar movies).But that might not even be the biggest story of the weekend.More...Movie Website Reviews for Weekend of June 27, 2008June 28th, 2008


June is filled with top picks, and practically only top picks. The best schedule for the overall health of the movie industry is only two wide releases, the potential blockbuster and the counter-programming release. This month that's exactly what happens; however, almost every week the counter-programming film has a serious shot at $100 million as well. If everything goes well, then we could have 8 films opening this month that crack 9 digits and that would put 2008 back on track. Even a more conservative estimate has four $100 million movies coming out this month, but there's a lot of uncertainty involved here. On the limited front, none of May's limited releases managed to breakout and expand wide, so there's still an opening for sleeper hit of the summer. That role could be filled by The Promotion, which appears to have the best shot at escaping the art hour circuit and reaching multiplexes. More...Cast Updates - March 28, 2008March 28th, 2008


Inside the Magic consists of multiple writers & videographers living near both Disneyland and Walt Disney World theme parks and around the world. This allows us to bring you the most interesting, entertaining, and unique entertainment experiences, covering theme parks, movies, TV, video games, and special events.


As you know, I was a big fan of David Gordon Green's new Halloween film (except for its simplistic title, which makes writing about it needlessly confusing), and so even though it's not exactly the right time of the year I was happy to get a copy to enjoy at home in the middle of January. Yes, the extras were a bit skimpy, but unlike certain other movies in the franchise (i.e. pretty much all of the others from the past 30 years) I wanted the movie for my collection because I actually liked it a lot, not because I'm a completist.


Would you like to add the film to your own growing collection of 4K discs? It's easy enough - just email bmdcontests@gmail.com with the name of the film you'd most like to see given the 4K UHD treatment. Your favorite movie? Something you haven't seen at all and have been waiting for a pristine presentation? Maybe just another Halloween sequel? No right or wrong answers (well, movies that are already available are indeed wrong answers), but you gotta get them in fast - I'll be picking a winner tomorrow, which is coincidentally the day the movie hits shelves. Please include your name and full mailing address so that we can get the disc to you ASAP! And if you're not 4K-ready yet, don't fret - the disc includes a standard blu-ray and a digital code, so unless you're on dialup with standard DVD, you won't be left out here. Good luck! It's, uh, January - everyone's entitled to one good scare.


DVD Talk Forum Select Forum Area...Forum Home--------------------DVD TalkDVD ReviewsDVD HardwareHD TalkInternational DVD--------------------DVD Bargains DVD Exchange Hot DealsStore Forum--------------------Book TalkComic Book TalkMovie TalkMusic TalkTV TalkVideo Game Talk-------------------- Tech Talk OtherSports--------------------FeedbackSearch-------------------- Forum Home Resources DVD Price SearchCustomer Service #'sRCE InfoLinks Columns var xyz = '//www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/list.php?orderBy=Date&reviewType=All&searchText=';function d(e, z) var sb = document.getElementById('sb');var px = document.getElementById('px');if(e.id == '') sb.value = 'Search ' + e.innerHTML; else sb.value = e.id;var t = px.getElementsByTagName('A');for(var i = 0; i Search: Below the Beltway Main Down in the Holler: Acting out with the The Heart, She Holler Crew DVDTalk Interview with Joe CornishA Chap Off the Old Block: Writer/Director Joe Cornish's Attack the Blockby Francis Rizzo IIIAfter 15 years working in TV, radio and film, British writer director Joe Cornish has finally become an overnight sensation, thanks to his cult hit sci-fi flick Attack the Block, which chronicles the battle between a gang of inner-city London street toughs and the vicious aliens who crash-land in their neighborhood one night. Up next for Cornish is the release of the film on DVD and Blu-Ray (arriving October 25th), the high-profile new Tintin animated movie, which he did a re-write on with pal Edgar Wright, and a co-writing gig with Wright on his highly-anticipated Ant-Man feature film. But first, he took a moment to sit down with DVDTalk's Francis Rizzo III to talk about aliens, anti-heroes and audio commentaries. (Warning: spoilers and foul language ahead!)Q: Let's talk about two of the big elements in Attack the Block that were problematic for you as far as your feature debut. One would be the actual creatures, which are pretty much the centerpiece of your film, and the other is the blood and gore effects, which is another signature of the film. A: With the creatures it was very much we didn't have the budget for CGI and at the same time I'm a little bored of CGI in contemporary movies. I feel that the creatures are all a little bit "samey" and there's an obsession with hyper-realistic detail, and you know, I grew up in the '80s so I love Gremlins and Ghostbusters and Critters and E.T and I love practical effects. And I know a lot of filmmakers say that now and often they say that and when you see the film it's all CG, but we couldn't afford CG so that was a limitation that I thought was also an opportunity to go back to that old-school feel.So our creatures are a man in a suit, this guy Terry Notary, who worked on Avatar, Fantastic Four, the Hulk and Silver Surfer, and he's in a costume designed by Spectral Motion, that does all Guillermo del Toro's work, and then we used CG to actually take away detail and make them into these sort of shadow puppets almost. But that for me was an exciting kind of meeting point of CGI and practical. And I thought by making them almost like two-dimensional animation, I always hoped we could create a creature that felt a little bit old-school but also unlike anything you've kind of seen before.I really had no idea how people would react to them. When we first showed the film at South by Southwest I had no idea how people would respond to them. You know, I always thought of Attack the Block as like the most terrifying and irresponsible episode of Sesame Street ever made.Q: You cite Critters and Goonies, and this has been compared for obvious reasons to Shaun of the Dead and District 9, but it's its own beast isn't it?A: Yeah.Q: Where did you want to go and what did you want to avoid?A: Well, you know I'm good friends with Edgar Wright and I've known him for years and years. The guys a genius and he has a very particular visual style and flavor, so I didn't want to be accused of copying or cashing in in any way, so I wanted to make sure I did something different. I was very directly inspired by John Carpenter, particularly, Carpenter, Romero in the sense that Night of the Living Dead, as well as being an amazing zombie movie, has a very interesting racial and political subtext to it, as does Assault on Precinct 13, and I was really interest in...you know, for me the best science-fiction is a way at looking at the present as imagining the future or some parallel reality, and the thing that made me make the film is my concern for the kids that are depicted in it. You know, we shot the film and the film is set in the area where II grew up, and really, beyond being a sci-fi movie, it's actually a quite sincere, heartfelt plea toward kids like that, who I think exist in all cities all over the world, in particularly teenagers, who, when they get together, are very strong. Teenagers have a lot of energy and a lot of humor and a lot of strength, and I wanted to show that if you're not careful and you don't care for them then that can go wrong. And also i wanted to show that in the right circumstances, kids like that, that energy can be used terrifically positively. So that's really why I made the film. It's really all about those kids and it's all about those kids and what the do at the beginning of the film, the bad thing that they do, and it's all about what they learn from that and the consequences of it. so it's really trying to be an allegory in a way.Q: Do you feel that British film and television, especially genre material, leans more toward the anti-hero than the hero? In the movie, Sam says herself "You're not heroes," and you have things like Misfits and even Shaun of the Dead.A: Yeah. I certainly think that's probably true. You know, especially with Misfits and Guy Ritchie's films and Jonathan Glazer's films, but I think maybe that's just the advantage of being an independent filmmaker. That if you get it right and you work with the right people, it;s easier to make an unmediated statement. There's less interference and less politics. I'm kind of guessing, because this is my first film, but that's the sense I get. I also think that narrative has become very conservative in contemporary movies. You know, it's very difficult to think of a villain, which is why so many movies are science-fiction or period pieces. It's very difficult to think of a villain in a contemporary movie that isn't somehow politically incorrect or insulting somebody,. And I think personally, movies in the 70s and 80s felt a bit more adventurous in their narrative structure. And a kot of the time when I go to the movies, I feel like I'm seeing the same story over and over again. Not in the detail but in terms of the overall structure, the way the lead character is made very emphatic in the first 10 minutes, in the way the first inciting incident happens at exactly on the 15, the way the progressive complications will happen between act two and act three. I don't know. It felt to me that things used to be a bit more interesting. In literature they certainly are. I don't know quite what it is, but that was the feeling that I got and I was excited to make a film where the lead characters would start off doing something really bad. (laughs) I knew it would freak some people out, but I thought, you know "Fuck it."Q: We get hardly any backstory on the aliens, but as a storyteller you know the backstory, so give us a little more than we get in the film.A: Well, the backstory is pretty much what Brewis says toward the end of the film. So here's the thing... they come from either a low-gravity or a volcanic planet. They live on this planet. Part of their reproductive or breeding cycle, they exude some kind of weird substance that solidifies around them like a cocoon, then either solar winds or the low gravity or a volcanic eruption blows them into orbit, the female first because she's lighter, the males because they're heavier, then the drift through space like spores or pollen, until they hit something. And the rest is explained in the movie. I've got a weird picture in my head of this volcanic planet where they live, which is very deep black, charcoal rock, and then the bright glowing embers of the volcanoes, like the design of the film, with fluorescent and darkness. But I don't know whether that's biologically feasible. I'll have to ask David Attenborough. I'll have to use my contacts at the BBC to try and get the team behind the series Earth to figure out whether that's feasible.Q: They say you should never work with children or animals, and you worked with children and fake animals and special effects. Was there ever a point during the filming when you wished you'd just written a quiet film instead?A: No. But you know what, that's what Edgar said to me. He said "You've made it as hard as possible." We did all the things you're not supposed to do. Children, animals, stunts, special effects, costumed performers, all at night, pyrotechnics, explosions, slang, multicultural cast. It's everything you're not supposed to do. But I'm very pleased we did. I figured, in the UK in particular, there are a lot of first-time film directors, not that many second-time film directors and very few third-time directors, And I figured if I'm going to have one shot, why not be ambitious and if it fucks up, at least I tried. And if it's in any way successful then it will have been worth it. Plus, movies for me aren't about talk. A good movie for me, you can switch the sound down and it will work,. So I wanted to make a film about movement, kinetics, things happening, action, character development through action. I wanted to make a film about people doing things, rather than talking about them. I think as soon as you make that decision, you end up with all the cool stuff.Q: All the kids in the movie are well developed and well crafted characters. One of the most memorable moments in the movie is when they rush down the stairs and arm themselves at their particular homes. Did you build full backstories and pare them down?A: That came from research. In my research I would ask the young people I spoke to, "You're in this situation, and the creatures come down, what do you do?" I got each kid to describe what their home was like, who would be there when they got home, what weapons they would use, where they would find it. So that all came out of real detail. I'm glad you picked up on that, because by the end of the movie you know about the parents of every individual, you know about Brewis and his dad's car, and you know about Sam who's on the phone to her mom at the beginning, so the family environment of every character is revealed as the narrative goes on and that's entirely intentional, but yeah, that all came from research. That's something Edgar taught me when we were writing Ant-Man, when we started all those years ago, he stressed the importance of research and I was like "Research? For a film about a man who shrinks to the size of an ant?" But then you know the way he taught me tio go about doing it was a real revelation to me, and again the whole film is a combination of truth and bullshit. I supplied the bullshit, but then you have to go get the truth, because the combination of the two makes for good balance.Q: Do you want to talk a bit about your use of color and light? Aside from the advantage with the limited budget, was there a philosophy?A: Absolutely. We looked very hard at The Warriors and Andrew Laszlo's work. The main driving factor with the movie, is that films set in this environment are usually very grainy. there's this kind of bleak aesthetic that's associated with handheld naturalism, draining the color out. I wanted to go completely the other way. We wanted to make it almost color saturated, like a '70s or '60s Disney film. I looked at the night sequences in Mary Poppins, the extraordinary rooftop sequence with the fireworks going off. Just the pleasure of looking at an image, the pleasure of color and light and irridescence and tonality. We looked at The Thing and the amazing levels of contrast he achieves in The Thing, the bright whiteness of the snow and the darkness of the shadows, often in the same frame. That was how I chose Tom Townend as cinematographer, I specifically looked for someone who could shoot night and keep that same level of contrast without grain. I saw a commercial he made for Virgin Mobile in the UK and it did exactly that. I went on IMDB and found out who shot it and hired him.Q: Should Americans feel bad about having to put subtitles on?A: No. I'd love people to put the subtitles on. I thought a bit about that, and I took it home and took special care to go through every subtitle, so they're all edited by me. The one that annoys me is when Jerome says "This is too much madness for one text," they couldn't fit all the words on, so I'm not sure that one exactly verbatim. But apart from that, I took special care, particularly with that in mind.Q: Lately it seems DVDs and Blu-Ray are offering less and less special features, especially less and less commentaries, and you did three of them.A: Yeah, sorry about that. laughsQ: Are you a fan of them?A: I am a fan of them. I mean I thought we had a particularly good gang of people. I really wanted to do one with Edgar, and we go out of our way not to talk about what's happening on the screen with Edgar. It's basically like a kind of podcast. I do radio in the UK and I have a podcast in the UK, so I love radio and audio. The young actors are fucking great and so funny and full of energy, so I thought it would be interesting for people to hear them talk naturally, and see the extent to which they use the slang and all that stuff. It was just good times.What surprised me was how quickly it happens. Like, before you know it, it's "Oh fuck, the commentaries are at 7 a.m. tomorrow." And so I kind of wanted to plan them more and scruipt shit, but I never got the time so we kind of riffed. But I know what you mean about DVDs and Blu-Rays becomes less kind of suped-up. But this is a suped-up disc. We've got a really good making-of, like a 58-minute making-of, because I love good making-ofs. I love Fincher's making-ofs . I love the Three Kings making-of. I was watching the making of that French film Point Blank the other day which is really good. So we got a good 58-minutes making-of, three commentaries, a 10-minute thing on how we did the creatures. And we worked really hard on the picture quality, and really hard on the sound quality,. I'm a big home cinema enthusiast. I have a projector and I have a home surround-sound system. All through the production of this movie, i would fantasize about the moment I got home and put the disc in my system. I wanted to make it good. We spent a long time on the sound and I'm very pleased with the reviews in the UK being particularly strong technically on the surround and the picture quality, which I'm very happy about. 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