samedi 30 septembre 2017

Exclusive: Jason Blum Talks Todd McFarlane Directing Spawn

EXCLUSIVE: Jason Blum Talks Todd McFarlane Directing Spawn

Exclusive: Jason Blum Talks Todd McFarlane Directing Spawn

After years of anticipation, Spawn creator Todd McFarlane announced at this year’s San Diego Comic-Con that he his entertainment division (McFarlane Films) are partnering with Jason Blum and Blumhouse Productions (Get OutSplitThe Purge) to make a feature film of the Image Comics character. Now ComingSoon.net has spoken exclusively to producer Jason Blum about the prospect of McFarlane directing Spawn and how they plan to accomplish bringing the character back to the big screen.

ComingSoon.net: If you look at Todd McFarlane’s career, him becoming a movie director almost seems inevitable. He’s obviously worked in film and TV and music videos before, but how do you think he’s going to adapt his singular style to movies?

Jason Blum: I think he’s gonna do a great job. Being a director encompasses a lot of different skills, but one of the most important skills is you have to be a great manager. You’re kind of a General of this army that you have to lead into battle every day, and he does that in his life every day running McFarlane Enterprises. So I think that translates to directing in a lot of ways. We’ve had a great back-and-forth around developing the script. I wouldn’t have done it if I didn’t think he could do a great job, but we’ll see. I have a good feeling about it.

CS: He’s said he sees this more as a down and dirty horror movie than a superhero film. Obviously demonic beings and hell are a big part of Spawn’s mythology, but how do you guys plan to translate Todd’s very dynamic form of storytelling onto a lower-scale budget?

Blum: (laughs) That’s a good question. One of the things is we’re keeping the scope of the script relatively contained, so that’s the biggest way. I think the other way is he and I aren’t paying ourselves any money out of the budget nor will any of the actors, so that’s another way. We’re using our usual tricks!

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McFarlane has written the first draft of the screenplay and is set to make his directorial debut in this dark exploration of one of comics’ most popular characters.

“We’ve gone from the theoretical to now we’re making movies,” McFarlane previously said. “Blumhouse. Spawn. Badass. R. Get ready for it, we’re going into production. No more talking, it’s time to do.”

McFarlane is known for reinventing the look of Spider-Man as well as co-creating the Venom character for Marvel Comics. First appearing in 1992’s Spawn #1, the character quickly became the symbol for 1990s comics dark and brutal antiheroes. His Hellspawn powers allow him to teleport, shape shift, and utilize a variety of weapons (notably chains) in combat.

Spawn previously made the leap to the big screen in 1997 with Michael Jai White in the title role and then on television as an HBO animated miniseries, titled Todd McFarlane’s Spawn.

The post Exclusive: Jason Blum Talks Todd McFarlane Directing Spawn appeared first on ComingSoon.net.

Exclusive: Jason Blum Dishes on the Halloween Reboot

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Excluive: Jason Blum dishes on the Halloween reboot

With filming set to begin in just a few weeks in Charleston, South Carolina on the next chapter in the Halloween franchise, ComingSoon.net had the chance to speak exclusively with Blumhouse impresario Jason Blum (The Purge, Get Out, Split) about the new movie’s director David Gordon Green and bringing original director John Carpenter back into the fold!

ComingSoon.net: I was really thrilled when you got David to do the “Halloween” movie. I met him back in 2000 when he came to my college with “George Washington” and I was floored by that movie. And even though it was very tender and poetic it also has a haunting quality, so David doing horror always seemed like a cool idea. Can you talk a little bit about David bringing his style to the genre and what appealed to you about him on this project?

Jason Blum: I think that good horror movie directors are good directors. Hollywood thinks you have to have directed a good horror movie to direct a studio horror movie, but I would much rather have someone who has directed a bunch of good movies than one good horror movie to direct one of our movies. What David brings to “Halloween” is he’s an amazing storyteller. He’s writing with Danny [McBride] and we start shooting in about five weeks, but what he’s bringing to it are his abilities as a great storyteller.

CS: As a huge Carpenter fan I was always curious about the “Halloween 4” idea he had prior to the one that got made, which I believe Dennis Etchison wrote a script for, that was more about the idea of Michael Myers as a spirit. Did you ever talk to Carpenter about that script and the ideas he and Debra Hill had?

Blum: I didn’t talk to him about that but I think David might have.

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CS: How would you describe Carpenter’s involvement in the movie?

Blum: We don’t take any big steps without his approval, so for instance hiring David and Danny he approved. He approved their pitch, he approved their first script. He approved bringing back Jamie Lee Curtis. So anytime we make a big creative turn he’s involved with that and we don’t do it without his blessing.

CS: I know he’s been very happy to sit back and take the checks when the remakes come around, but its good to hear he has more of an active involvement in this one, or at least a say.

Blum: We went to him and asked him to be involved. There was no contractual, financial or any other obligation to have him on this movie. We went back and asked him to join us again.

CS: Was our former ShockTillYouDrop editor Ryan Turek involved in that initiative?

Blum: He was less a part of that, but Ryan was a huge part of us doing “Halloween.” Ryan was the one who drove that decision from the very beginning. Ryan sat at the table, I still remember, and said, “We have to make ‘Halloween,’ this is what’s happened and this is where its going. We wouldn’t ever have gotten involved with “Halloween” if it weren’t for Ryan.

Jamie Lee Curtis will return to the franchise that kicked off her career and she will once again be playing the iconic role of Laurie Strode, who comes to her final confrontation with Michael Myers. Despite Curtis’ character being unceremoniously killed off for 2002’s Halloween: Resurrection, in true Halloween franchise fashion the new film will ignore the continuity of many of the sequels in favor of telling its own story branching off the first two films. Curtis has previously appeared in four films in the series, including the 1978 original, its 1981 sequel, 1998’s Halloween H20: 20 Years Later, and Resurrection.

David Gordon Green (Pineapple ExpressYour Highness) will direct Halloween and co-write the script for the film with Danny McBride (yes, Eastbound & Down star Danny McBride).

John Carpenter will executive produce with Malek Akkad producing for Trancas and Jason Blum producing for Blumhouse. Green and McBride will also executive produce under their Rough House Pictures banner. Zanne Devine and David Thwaites will oversee for Miramax which is co-financing with Blumhouse.

The film will arrive in theaters from Universal Pictures on October 19, 2018, forty years after the premiere of the original film.

The post Exclusive: Jason Blum Dishes on the Halloween Reboot appeared first on ComingSoon.net.

The Truth Must Be Taken in Marvel’s The Punisher Key Art

The Truth Must Be Taken in Marvel's The Punisher Key Art

The truth must be taken in Marvel’s The Punisher key art

Following yesterday’s motion poster for the series, Netflix has released the official key art for Marvel’s The Punisher which you can check out in the player below. The premiere date for the series remains a mystery, but it is set to arrive before the end of the year.

RELATED: Frank Takes Point in New Marvel’s The Punisher Poster

After exacting revenge on those responsible for the death of his wife and children, Frank Castle (Jon Bernthal) uncovers a conspiracy that runs far deeper than New York’s criminal underworld. Now known throughout the city as The Punisher, he must discover the truth about injustices that affect more than his family alone.

The series is executive produced by showrunner Steve Lightfoot (Hannibal), Jim Chory (Marvel’s The Defenders) and Jeph Loeb (Marvel’s The Defenders), who also serves as Marvel’s Head of Television. Marvel’s The Punisher is produced by Marvel Television in association with ABC Studios for Netflix.

RELATED: Netflix Releases a New Trailer for Marvel’s The Punisher

The cast also features Ebon Moss-Bachrach (Girls, The Lake House), Deborah Ann Woll (Marvel’s Daredevil, True Blood), Ben Barnes (Westworld, The Chronicles of Narnia), Amber Rose Revah (Emerald City, Indian Summers), Michael Nathanson (The Knick, The Wolf of Wall Street), Jaime Ray Newman (Bates Motel), Jason R Moore (A Lonely Place for Dying), Daniel Webber (11.22.63) and Paul Schulze (Nurse Jackie).

Marvel’s The Punisher is part of an overall deal between Marvel Television and Netflix, which has already released the critically-acclaimed seasons of Marvel’s DaredevilMarvel’s Jessica Jones and Marvel’s Luke Cage, and Marvel’s Iron Fist. All the heroes have also united in the mini-series event Marvel’s The Defenders.

The post The Truth Must Be Taken in Marvel’s The Punisher Key Art appeared first on ComingSoon.net.

Warner Bros. Debuts New Justice League Prints

Warner Bros. Debuts New Justice League Prints

Warner Bros. debuts new Justice League prints

While they haven’t revealed what these are for, Warner Bros. Pictures has released five new Justice League prints featuring Batman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, The Flash and Cyborg. His logo is at the bottom of every single one of the Justice League prints, but Superman is again missing here. The studio says more details on the prints will be revealed in October.

Justice League stars Ben Affleck as Batman, Henry Cavill as Superman, Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman, Jason Momoa as Aquaman, Ezra Miller as The Flash, Ray Fisher as Cyborg, Willem Dafoe as Nuidis Vulko, Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor, Jeremy Irons as Alfred Pennyworth, Diane Lane as Martha Kent, Connie Nielsen as Queen Hippolyta, Billy Crudup as Henry Allen, Amber Heard as Mera, Kiersey Clemons as Iris West, with J.K. Simmons as Commissioner Gordon, and Amy Adams as Lois Lane.

RELATED: Danny Elfman on Scoring the Justice League Music

Fueled by the hero’s restored faith in humanity and inspired by Superman’s selfless act, Justice League sees Bruce Wayne enlist the help of his newfound ally, Diana Prince, to face an even greater enemy. Together, Batman and Wonder Woman work quickly to find and recruit a team of metahumans to stand against this newly awakened threat. But despite the formation of this unprecedented league of heroes—Batman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, Cyborg and The Flash—it may already be too late to save the planet from an assault of catastrophic proportions.

Directed by Zack Snyder (Batman v Superman: Dawn of JusticeMan of Steel), the screenplay is by Joss Whedon and Chris Terrio from a story by Snyder and Terrio. Whedon directed the additional photography for the sequel and is overseeing the completion of its post production following Snyder’s family tragedy. Justice League is produced by Charles Roven, Deborah Snyder, Jon Berg and Geoff Johns. The executive producers are Jim Rowe, Wesley Coller, Curt Kanemoto, Chris Terrio and Ben Affleck.

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