Exclusive interviews: Duncan Jones (Director of Moon) - Andrew Barker (Director of Straw Man) - Tony Grisoni (Screen Writer of Red Riding Trilogy, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas) - Michael Marshall Smith (author of Spares, Only Forward, The Straw Men etc) - Alejandro Adams (Director of Canary) - Ryan Denmark (Director of Romeo & Juliet vs The Living Dead) - Neal Asher (author of the Cormac series, The Skinner etc) - Marc Robert & Will Stotler (Able) - Kenny Carpenter (Director of Salvaging Outer Space)

Press Conference - Public Enemies - Johnny Depp, Michael Mann, Marion Cotillard

NEWS - REVIEWS - TRAILERS - POSTERS - INTERVIEWS - FORUM - CONTACT


FEATURED REVIEWS - Public Enemies - Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen - Moon - The Hurt Locker

LFF is on Facebook - Twitter - Friend Feed

Showing posts with label Breck Eisner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Breck Eisner. Show all posts

Thursday, 16 April 2009

The Crazies - What will they look like? Eisner spills his guts

Recently a selection of film press people were invited to the Georgia set of The Crazies, a remake of the 1973 original by George Romero.

As I've mentioned previously Breck Eisner (Sahara) directs from a script by Ray Wright (Pulse) and Scott Kosar (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre - 2003). A chemical weapon has invaded the water supply of the small rural Iowa town of Ogden Marsh and it is turning infected into raving lunatics. While the original offered a heavy dose of military perspective, the remake presents the military as more of an ominous presence tasked with correcting the problem and also covering it up along the way. Kind of like the way the military were portrayed in the original Half-Life.

Timothy Olyphant stars as Sheriff David Dutton; Radha Mitchell is his pregnant wife, Dr. Judy Dutton; Joe Anderson is Deputy Russell Clank and Danielle Panabaker is the hospital receptionist, Becca.

“In this scene we’re lining up, basically heading to the concentration camp and we don’t know what’s going to happen to us,” says Radha Mitchell. “I don’t think the government officials know exactly how they are going to deal with us either. They are measuring everyone’s temperature to see who’s got an elevated temperature. And the people that appear to be sick are being pushed in one direction and the other people are being pushed in the other direction.”

“[My character] has an elevated temperature because she’s pregnant, but of course they don’t believe that or they don’t care. So she’s going in one direction and he’s going in the other and its hopefully going to be quite dramatic.”

Breck Eisner really likes the filming in the wide open spaces of Georgia “I really wanted the wide open plains,” says Eisner. “What worked nicely here is we could have that same scope. I wanted this idea that our heroes are not trapped in small boxes, but open spaces that go on for miles and miles and miles. There’s literally nowhere to hide.”

To design the Crazies, Eisner and makeup designer Rob Hall went to great lengths to differentiate the look from classic zombies. “The challenge for us was making them look interesting and iconic but not like zombies,” says Eisner. “We didn’t want them to be so far over the top that you don’t believe that it could be a sickness that made this happen.”

To do this, Eisner and Hall referenced actual diseases such as Tetanus, Ebola and Rabies.

“They are really horrific looking,” says Olyphant. “They are strained looking. Their bodies are kind of arched and their veins are popping out and their blood vessels are popping. Their eyes are kind of blood [shot].”

“They're almost like they're the opposite of dead,” adds Hall. “There's too much life in them so they're like bursting at the seams. Their faces are red and there are blood blisters and veins and they're very vascular."

“There are five stages of The Crazies,” Eisner explains. “The first is before anything happens, the fifth is when you’re dead. The second stage is a performance-based craziness which is somebody you know acting differently but not looking differently at all. The next two stages are various levels of physical differences.”

But the director was careful not to turn The Crazies into a military action chase movie. “When I came on the movie, I wanted to get rid of the point of view of the military,” says Eisner. “Any time you [have that], it goes away from horror and it goes to action, Bourne Identity kind of action. To me it was much more interesting being in the point-of-view of our townsfolk and with this oppressive, nameless, faceless force of the military and the bio-containment suits wandering around.”

“[I wanted to] put them through the terror [along with] the other infected Crazies that are roaming the town. It’s horrific and graphic, but I wanted a real quality to it. We’re not shying away from blood.”

The Crazies opens 25th September 2009 and I cannot wait. Sounds like it should be quite an intense film.

Source: Dark Horizons

Leave a comment on this post below.

HOME

Wednesday, 15 April 2009

The Crazies - First look at Timothy Olyphant

Bloody Disgusting debuted this new photo as well as a set visit report for The Crazies.

Looks like Timmy boy has got himself into some trouble

As well as Olyphant, The Crazies stars Radha Mitchell, Danielle Panabaker, Joe Anderson, Joe Reegan, and a whole town full of crazy Kansas locals. The story revolves around the inhabitants of a small Kansas town who are beset by death and insanity after a plane crash lets loose a secret biological weapon into the water supply. This is a remake of George Romero's 1973 film The Crazies and is being directed by Breck Eisner.

Source: First Showing

Leave a comment on this post below.

HOME

Breck Eisner to remake Flash Gordon and The Creature from the Black Lagoon

Breck Eisner is currently busy directing the remake of George Romero's The Crazies.

It looks like he has got a taste for remakes as Arrow in the Head chatted to him about Flash Gordon and The Creature from the Black Lagoon.

Flash Gordon has always been a character I've enjoyed. The old comic by Alex Raymond has some beautiful artwork, as does the work by Al Williamson. The Buster Crabbe black and white serial was always fun to watch (loved the spacecraft designs in that one) and the Sam Jones Flash Gordon film was a camp masterpiece - Max Von Sydow was Ming the Merciless. The less said about the recent TV series the better.

Here is what Eisner had to say about his version of Flash Gordon:
"We broke story with the writers [Matt] Sazama and [Burk] Sharpless for the last five or six months or so. They went to draft just as we started shooting, and they're going to get to me a draft at wrap. I'll read it and do notes and we'll do a polish on that and give it to the studio a couple months from now. Hopefully the studio will like it and we'll go forward. It's a big movie and the studio has got to love the script."

"The thing about FLASH is, you've got to throw away the 80s version of it. I want it to be intense, aggressive, gritty and real. For me it's about reinventing FLASH - we're still staying true to the adventure origins of it, and the adventurous spirit in that movie, absolutely. It's this man brought to another planet and uniting the disperate groups on Mongo, but there is a gritty, intense, dynamic, active quality to the movie. Very modern. It's not camp."
I quite like the sound of this revamp. Lots of adventure and action is always good.

The Creature from the Black Lagoon is one of those sci-fi horror classics of yesteryear. I was lucky enough to get it in a DVD box set from my wife last Christmas. It is a great film, although some of the dialogue and acting is a bit of its time. The creature suit and underwater filming though is simply stunning even after all these years. What Eisner has to say about this remake sounds promising:
"I want it to be scary. It's a bigger movie, so it's not an R rated scary, it's gonna be a PG-13 scary. CREATURE takes you to a place you've never been before, it's one of the last untamed places on the edge of the Earth where you find this creature that has been living and hiding there forever, basically. It's definitely going for a dark adventure tone, but I want it to be scary."
This is definitely ripe for a remake.

Out of the two I think the Flash Gordon one is the most exciting, yet the Black Lagoon remake may end up being the most satisfying.

Which of the two remakes are you most excited about?

Leave a comment on this post below.

HOME

Thursday, 5 March 2009

Panabaker is one of The Crazies

Danielle Panabaker (Friday the 13th, Mr Brooks, Sky High, Shark) and Joe Anderson (Across the Universe, The Ruins) have joined Timothy Olyphant (TV's "Damages," Hitman, Deadwood) and Radha Mitchell (Silent Hill, Pitch Black) in Overture Films' The Crazies, a reinvention loosely based upon the George Romero cult classic. The film is set to begin principal photography in Georgia on March 5th with additional shooting to occur in Iowa.

Panabaker will play Becca, a receptionist at the town's medical center where Mitchell is a doctor.

Anderson will play the role of the town's deputy, with Olyphant playing the sheriff.

Breck Eisner is set to direct the screenplay about the inhabitants of a small Kansas town beset by insanity and then death after a mysterious toxin contaminates their water supply. The film is written by Ray Wright, from an earlier draft by Scott Kosar.

Source: Mania

HOME - Discuss in the Forum

Thursday, 19 February 2009

The Crazies - Cool teaser poster for remake of Romero's film

Timothy Olyphant and Radha Mitchell star in the remake that is being directed by Breck Eisner (Sahara). It is all about about the inhabitants of a small Kansas town who are beset by death and insanity after a plane crash lets loose a secret biological weapon into the water supply.

I really like the look of the poster. Spooky looking gas mask / skull. Red for danger and strange figures. Cool.
What do you make of the poster?

Saturday, 22 November 2008

Timothy Olyphant to be one of The Crazies

Timothy Olyphant is about to enter the world of George A. Romero. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Olyphant has secured the lead role for The Crazies remake.

The film, based off Romero's 1973 original film, will center on the tiny populace of a Kansas town that is plagued by madness and death after a plane crashes nearby, releasing a biological weapon into the town's water supply. Olyphant will portray the town's sherrif.

Breck Eisner is directing from a script by Scott Kosar and Ray Wright, with Romero himself executive producing. No production schedule was released for the project.
Home / Forum / Guestbook

Wednesday, 8 October 2008

George Romero's The Crazies next in the remake gravy train.


Overture Films has signed on to produce The Crazies, a remake of George Romero's 1973 horror.According to Variety, Breck Eisner (Sahara and the rumoured Flash Gordon remake) will direct from a script by Ray Wright and Scott Kosar. Michael Aguilar and Dean Georgaris will produce; Romero will serve as executive producer.

The Crazies revolves around people in a small Kansas town who are beset by a virus that causes insanity and death after a mysterious toxin contaminates the local water supply.

The project was previously set up at Rogue Pictures and Paramount. Overture CEO Chris McGurk and chief operating officer Danny Rosett felt it was a good fit for the company's expanding slate.

Production is set to begin early next year.

Source: Movieweb

I've not seen the original but the concept sounds pretty good. If you have seen the original what's it like and what do you think about the remake news?

HOME / FORUM.