Author: Robert Greenberger

Jeffrey Katzenberg Sees the Future in 3-D

Jeffrey Katzenberg firmly believes in 3-D and told the audience at the inaugural 3DX Film and Entertainment Technology Festival, "In five to seven years, all films, regardless of budgets or type, will be made in 3-D."

As seen this year and reported yesterday, more and more animated films and concert films are being shot for 3-D using improved technology.  Katzenberg, according to The Hollywood Reporter, continued to say, "3-D is how we see, how we take things in. It’s natural. This is not a gimmick; it’s an opportunity to immerse the audience, to heighten the experience."

The DreamWorks co-founder and former Disney executive foresees a day when 3-D technology will be available on mobile phones and laptops. "This is not my father’s 3-D," he said. "There’s no ghosting, no eye strain and best of all, you don’t throw up. Throwing up is not good for anyone’s business."

Producer John Landau added that 3-D would "do for cinema what stereo did for the audio industry." He says the immediate challenge is to get movie audiences to see 3-D as something other than a gimmick from B-films and the 1950s. Once accepted, he says the sky’s the limit.

"Consumers clearly prefer 3-D if they have a choice," Katzenberg said. 3-D films are estimated as being able to earn two to three times the business of a standard 2-D release.

Disney leads the pack with eleven films currently scheduled for release between 2009 and 2010. DreamWorks’ next 3-D offering will be March’s Monsters vs. Aliens and Katzenberg estimates nearly 40% of the ticket sales will come from 3-D fans. He predicts the percentage will jump to over 80 for Shrek 4 in 2010.

Stressing the technical advances that made the latest incarnation of 3-D different from past efforts, Katzenberg said 3-D "will bring people back to the movies who have stopped going."

Arnold Just May Be Back in ‘Terminator Salvation’

Arnold Schwarzenegger may well have shot a cameo for McG’s Terminator Salvation film according to Total FIlm.

“We’re trying to synthesize a human character with a CGI character and that may or may not have something to do with the T800,” McG told the site. “At the moment it’s not good enough,” he said. “And we’re running out of time.”

The synthesis being attempted by Industrial Light & Magic have not been deemed successful.

Meantime, Moviehole says that McG took advantage of the film’s ending being leaked to alter so there will be surprises. “That is not the ending. John Connor is not the machine. We did discuss that idea, but that is not the ending, I can say that right now.”
 

A Good Day for ‘Monty Python’ Fans

It’s a good day for Monty Python fans.  First, Amazon is offering the just-released box set of the entire pioneering television deeply discounted for 24 hours. The normal $99.99 list price is down to a mere $39.99 until midnight.

Meantime, the Monty Python troupe now has a YouTube channel featuring about 24 collections of clips, outtakes and interviews with the gang. And instead of pretending its all about getting to know its audience, the group admits the channel is a direct ploy to sell Monty Python DVDs and merchandise, utilizing YouTube’s new partnership with Amazon (see above).
 

A Look at Marvel’s Softcover Masterworks

Marvel’s David Gabriel and Cory Sedlmeier spoke with the Marvel Masterworks fansite about their collected editions plans for 2009, as Marvel kicks off its 70th anniversary plans. The biggest news is that the 20 year old Masterwork program will add softcover editions beginning in January.

Gabriel explained, “They will be issued one per month in the original running order of release. There will be a regular edition and a variant that resembles the marble hardcover variants. The first edition is listed in the January previews, and we’re just putting February together now.” The first Masterwork was Amazing Spider-Man volume one and will retail at $24.99.

These softcovers will be added to the 16 new volumes planned for 2009, which will push Marvel’s Masterworks library to 126 volumes.  DC’s similar Archives library, in comparison, has only a handful of titles planned for 2009 and have reformatted the hardcovers as their Chronicles line.

Sedlmeier added, “As readers know, the softcover Masterworks will be mirroring the release order of the hardcover line begun all the way back in 1987. The approach taken back then was not to restore the original comics’ coloring, but to recolor the books in what was then a modern style. When the program was reignited with new editions in 2004, I felt historical accuracy was something readers valued above a bells-and-whistles reinterpretation.

“That approach is now law, so the softcovers will be seeing restoration to bring any material not restored to match the original comics’ coloring to up the level of quality and historical accuracy readers see in our new hardcovers each and every month.

“A lot has already been accomplished through the Omnibus line and the new printings the Masterworks hardcovers have seen over the course of 2007 and 2008, so there’s a lot less restoration work cut out for us than there would be if we were starting from scratch.”

The trade dress for the Masterworks evolved through the years from the original “marble” look to an interim design from Comicraft until the line was spruced up in 2002.  Currently, the current trade dress is available as the standard format while the marble look is offered as an alternative at a higher price to cover manufacturing costs.  The look of the softcover line will be a modification. (more…)

‘Jonah Hex’ Needs a New Director

Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor, the team behind Crank, have withdrawn from Jonah Hex according to Variety. They wrote the script and intended to direct beginning in March with Josh Brolin (W.) in talks to play the disfigured bounty hunter.

The reason officially provided is that there were “creative differences” which could mean just about anything.

The studio told the trade they intended to replace the pair quickly to keep Brolin on board and still shoot in winter 2009. This is yet another setback to DC Comics getting films off the ground in a highly competitive marketplace.
 

Catalyst Games Wants WizKids’ Properties

ICv2 reports that Catalyst Games has submitted a bid for WizKids’ properties, including HeroClix, the Pirates PocketModel Game, Star Wars PocketModel TCG, BattleTech/MechWarrior, and Shadowrun. Yesterday, former employees announced the formation of Piñata Games in the hopes of acquiring HeroClix. 

Catalyst currently has licenses for BattleTech and Shadowrun games which they acquired from WizKids and those games will continue despite WizKids sudden closure.

“Catalyst has demonstrated our ability to manage large and important intellectual properties,” Catalyst majority owner Loren Coleman told the site.  Coleman recently met with Topps execs in New York to discuss the potential acquisition.
 

Could ‘Pirates 4’ be in 3-D?

David S. Cohen at Variety blogged the following:

“To date, other than James Cameron’s Avatar, there have been no announcements of a major franchise installment in live-action 3-D. No 3-D Batman, Superman, Spider-Man, Die Hard or Pirates of the Caribbean. We hear from people who’ve worked on live-action 3-D that there’s a learning curve involved, and that a company or studio should make a 3-D movie before diving into the format.

“With that in mind, though, we can’t help but notice that 1) Disney is heavily invested in 3-D, including live-action. 2) Gore Verbinski and Johnny Depp are making an animated 3-D movie together, Rango. and 3) Jerry Bruckheimer is making G Force in 3-D.

“Disney, Bruckheimer, Verbinski, Depp… Nobody at Disney is talking, but we wouldn’t be surprised to hear a P4 3-D announcement one of these days.”

‘Ironbow’ to Recount William Tell Legend

William Tell is finally getting his due as Justin Chadwick (Bleak House) has signed on to direct Ironbow: The Legend of William Tell. He will work from Jay Wolpert’s (The Count of Monte Cristo) script about the marksman who was forced to shoot an apple from atop his son’s head.

Spyglass will produce the film with no studio or release date announced. Casting is expected to begin shortly.

The Hollywood Reporter offered up a concise recap of the tale: “The William Tell legend centers on a crossbow marksman who, when he would not bow to Austrian rule, was forced to shoot an apple off his son’s head in exchange for freedom. The local overlord who commanded the act noticed that Tell had a second arrow in his quiver, which Tell told him was meant for the overlord if the son was killed. Tell was promptly arrested but eventually escaped and killed the overlord, sparking a rebellion that led to the formation of the Swiss Confederation.”

The story is now considered fiction by historians who can find no authoritative evidence of Tell’s existence.  He has remained an inspiration, his story told and retold from stage to screen. The first film adaptation came from French director Charles Pathé in 1900 while the most recent interpretation was the German-language Tell, in 2007.

‘Voltron’ Tied up in Rights Problem

With every Hollywood studio trying to capture a little Transformers magic for themselves, most of the 70s and 80s anime series about transforming sentient robots has been optioned for live-action development.  And of course, that means someone’s unhappy and ready to sue.

In a comprehensive report, the Anime News Network dissected the suit between World Events Productions and Toei Animation over Voltron. The film rights are currently being held by New Regency which began pre-production over the summer.

The suit alleges that Toei’s Hyakujuu Ou Golion (King of Beasts Golion) and Kikou Kantai Dairugger XV (Mechanized Fleet Dairugger XV) which was licensed to Koplar Communications, an American firm, which combined them into the syndicated Voltron: Defender of the Universe series in 1984. Later, Koplar licensed Dairugger XV and incorporated it into the series for domestic audiences.

As the deal evolved, Toei and Koplar signed numerous agreements and in 1998, when Koplar created the CGI-animated Voltron: the Third Dimension in 1998, Toei filed a lawsuit which was ultimately settled with a new agreement signed in 2000.

When Koplar sold live-action rights to New Regency and The Mark Gordon Company on August 9, 2007, Toei sent a note complaining of not being consulted. Ted Koplar reacted by filing suit against Toei in February.  Part of the complaint states, "Through that investigation, New Regency identified an artist or author, Kazuo Nakamura, who may possess rights that encumber the Golion and/or Voltron properties and that interfere with World Events’ full and lawful enjoyment of the Golion and Voltron properties." Nakamura was a Toei employee who led character design on the properties.

In mid-August, New Regency said they were abandoning the project given the rights issues. The suit now alleges that Toei has cost Koplar “at least one development deal that would have resulted in a live-action motion picture."

As this works its way through the courts, other projects such as Robotech continue to move through the development process.

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‘Beauty and the Beast’ gets 3-D Makeover

beauty-and-the-beast-002-61231363-D is all the rage and Disney is jumping on the fad with both mouse-sized feet. Yesterday, they announced that their classic Beauty and the Beast will receive the three-dimensional treatment. The existing film will be put through Disney Digital 3-D technology according to Variety and joins a crowded 2010 schedule.

The nine month process will be overseen by the original filmmaking team: producer Don Hahn and co-directors Kirk Wise and Gary Trousdale.

“By going back to the original animation files, which have been carefully archived for 17 years, and using the separate background, effects and character animation elements, we’re able to come up with a fun and unique 3-D experience for existing and new fans of the film,” Hahn said.

With Bolt opening up in 3-D this weekend, the future looks packed. In 2009, fans can expect the Jonas Brothers 3-D Concert Movie, Pixar’s Up, Jerry Bruckheimer’s G-Force, and Robert Zemeckis’ Disney’s A Christmas Carol. Toy Story and Toy Story 2 will be re-released in 3-D as well.

Beauty joins a 2010 schedule that already includes Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland, Toy Story 3, Rapunzel, and Step Up 3.
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