Invasion Alert!: Tron Girls, Anne Hathaway & Stanley Kubrick Join the Invasion!

Too much of a good thing? Tron girls at the "Tron" premiere.

By Jason Apuzzo.Tron: Legacy opened reasonably well, although well enough to launch a franchise? I have doubts. I can’t escape the feeling that Disney blew a major opportunity here – that a film which could’ve been a major ‘tech noir’ classic slipped away into something frivolous … something that audiences really weren’t pining for to begin with (an over-merchandized sequel to an almost 30 year old film, featuring an extreme overdose of Jeff Bridges). I bought the Daft Punk soundtrack over the weekend, loved it (read interviews with Daft Punk here and here), and was left with the sense that what Disney could’ve had here was the anti-Avatar: i.e., a large-scale, humanistic sci-fi epic with the style and design of Blade Runner, and the heart of the original Star Wars. It’s too bad they settled for so much less.

Sci-fi’s Big Three – Lucas, Spielberg and Cameron – get a lot of criticism, especially in the overheated world of the internet. The reason those three are such indisputable masters of their craft, however, is that they focus attention on their lead characters – who typically are broken or otherwise unfulfilled young people with major challenges in their lives. I never had the sense that the spoiled-rotten billionaire kid in Legacy had really ever had his teeth kicked in; everything in life was just a little too cozy for him  – and neither Lucas, Spielberg or Cameron would’ve allowed their lead character to have such an easy time of it.

By the way, the LA Times just ran this interesting piece on whether Tron‘s world reflects the way the schizophrenic mind works. It’s an interesting question, actually, and one that I was ruminating on myself while watching the film; Tron really does present quite a paranoid vision of the digital/virtual world we ‘live’ in nowadays.

• The trailer for the new Transformers movie is out, and it’s actually a good deal better – and more epic in scale – than I would’ve expected a trailer for one of these films to be. The only question I have is how representative the trailer is of the rest of the film, as the trailer feels like something designed to capture the first 5-10 minutes of the movie in which the plot’s set up. I assume the rest of the film will involve watching Shia and Rosie Huntington-Whiteley run around, which I’m not necessarily looking forward to. In any case, the trailer is a nice start so far. Here‘s another new interview with Michael Bay, incidentally.

• On a similar note, Apollo 18 just started shooting in Vancouver – which, by the way, is apparently where Disney shot Tron. California’s back to being unaffordable again for filmmaking, which Hollywood’s Democrats didn’t bother to tell you when they were all out stumping for Jerry Brown recently. The new Total Recall, by the way, will similarly be shooting not in LA but in Toronto.

The new "Battle: Los Angeles" poster.

• A new poster for Battle: Los Angeles is out. I have the feeling this film is going to be the cream of the Alien Invasion crop, so to speak.

• First it was Rose McGowan, and now word has it that Anne Hathaway may be attached to the on-again/off-again remake of Barbarella. I generally have nothing against Ms. Hathaway, but she’s a bit gawky and a poor choice for this role – as I suspect she would ultimately push the film too much in the direction of Austin Powers-style comedy. With that said, she’s certainly fetching, sympathetic, and she meets the ABF Standard (Anybody But Fonda).

• There were a flurry of rumors recently about Ridley Scott’s Alien prequel(s), one of which was that the film would be titled Paradise, but those rumors were subsequently shot down by a Fox exec. The latest news is that H.R. Giger may be involved in the design of the new project; also, Olivia Wilde has confirmed that she’s not going to be appearing in the film. Hooray!

• In other Alien Invasion News & Notes: Sam Raimi’s huge alien invasion thriller Earth Defense Force is being rewritten right now; I Am Number 4 director DJ Caruso has a new interview out, and that film also has a new, extended trailer; Universal and the SyFy channel are going to partner on making low-budget (probably $5-$10 million) sci-fi films; production art has leaked for the forthcoming Battlestar Galactica prequel series Blood and Chrome; Matt Damon may end up toplining Neill Blomkamp’s Elysium (God help us); J.J. Abrams confirms that the screenplay for the new Star Trek still hasn’t been completed yet; Terry Gilliam will be godfathering a new, animated, retro-sci-fi spectacle set in 1884; the new Star Wars Frames book really looks wonderful; check out this great post over at TCM’s Movie Morlocks on Howard Hawks’ The Thing as a Christmas movie; and people in China are now getting Avatar-themed weddings, which is really depressing.

Brazilian model Sasckya Porto goes "Tron."

• On the Classic Alien Invasion Front, Green Slime is finally getting a decent DVD release! And it’s about time. That news pales,  however, in comparison to news recently that an extra 17 minutes of 2001: A Space Odyssey (cut from the film by Stanley Kubrick right after the film’s release) was discovered recently, although Warner Brothers claims they already knew about the footage and have it themselves under lock and key. Apparently, since Kubrick himself edited the footage out, Warners has no plans of putting it back in the film or re-issuing it on a Blu-ray. We’ll see if their resolve on that point holds.

• On the Aquatic Invasion Front, Ving Rhames may be back for Piranha 3DD, which is currently planning to shoot in New Orleans (doesn’t that sound like fun?). Also, David Fincher has apparently confirmed that he’ll be directing 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, so we should be seeing giant squid squirm across the big screen a few years from now …

• AND IN TODAY’S MOST IMPORTANT NEWS … Brazilian model Sasckya Porto adopts the Tron look, which more women should really should adopt in their everyday life – don’t you think?

And that’s what’s happening today on the Alien Invasion Front!

Posted on December 23rd, 2010 at 1:08pm.

In a World with No Peace: Panahi Sentenced, Muslim Actress Beaten, Arab League Boycotts Spielberg

Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi.

By Jason Apuzzo. Unhappy tidings as we approach Christmas:

• Director Jafar Panahi has been sentenced in Iran to 6 years in prison, and a 20 year ban on filmmaking or traveling abroad.

Actress Afshan Azad.

• Muslim actress Afshan Azad, a 22 year old UK star of the many Harry Potter films, was beaten and threatened with death by her family after she met a young man who was not a Muslim.

• One of the recently leaked WikiLeaks cables reveals that diplomats from 14 Arab states voted to ban Steven Spielberg’s films in response to his $1 million donation to Israel during Israel’s 2006 confrontation with Lebanon. (As a side note, the Arab League also apparently didn’t like the depiction of Arabs in Raiders of the Lost Ark.)

I’m pressed for time, and would otherwise like to say more about all this, but let me confine my remarks to these: that it is axiomatic, in my opinion, that there will be no peace in certain parts of this world until there is also freedom. In a time of year when thoughts of peace are on everyone’s minds, and justly so, we should never forget that freedom is the vital force that nurtures peace.

Final note: on the Panahi front, here is his Facebook page, and here is an on-line petition demanding the lifting of his sentence.

Posted on December 21st, 2010 at 2:28pm.

Cold War Update!: Jack Bauer, Salt, J. Edgar Hoover are Back + Andy Garcia Fights the Russian Invasion of Georgia!

By Jason Apuzzo. • One of the most intriguing things I’ve seen recently is the promotional trailer (see above) for director Renny Harlin’s new, $20 million Russian-invasion-of-Georgia thriller 5 Days of August, which is set for release in March.

Andy Garcia as Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili.

The film stars Val Kilmer, Andy Garcia (as Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili) and Heather Graham among others – and deals with a group of war correspondents caught behind enemy (i.e., Russian) lines when the Russians invaded Georgia back in 2008.

When the journalists videotape a series of horrific Russian war crimes, they have to fight to get the footage out of the country. The film was apparently shot on-location in Tbilisi, with the approval of the Georgian government.

From the look of the promotional trailer (which does not appear to be the final, theatrical trailer), it looks like Harlin is going hard-core in his criticism of the Russians – so this is going to get very interesting come March. Bravo to everyone involved for their courage in doing this, and please do try to avoid assassination.

Harlin (Die Hard 2) also seems to have squeezed a lot out of his $20 million budget, as the scale of the project seems impressive. We’ll be keeping an eye on this project here at Libertas. Val Kilmer really needs to drop some weight, by the way.

• In related news, Putin’s ballerina-mistress just appeared on the cover of Russian Vogue. (Did the old Politburo guys have mistresses? It’s hard to imagine Brezhnev sneaking off with his secretary.)

• Angelina Jolie’s The Tourist opened poorly (see the LFM review here), but fortunately there’s always Salt – which just hit Blu-ray and DVD. The new Salt disks apparently contain several different cuts of the film, including an ‘extended’ cut and also a ‘director’s’ cut – the differences between these cuts are explained here – and the cuts actually seem to represent legitimately different visions of the film, particularly with respect to the film’s ending. Without giving anything away about the new scenes, suffice it to say that sequels were definitely on everyone’s mind at the time of the production.

So will there be sequels? It’s too early to say, but director Phillip Noyce – who’s out doing media for the new DVDs – probably won’t be doing them himself (see here) as he seems to have moved on to other ventures.

We liked the retro, commie-hunting vibe of Salt here at Libertas (see our review here), and we’re hoping this film gets its franchise. If it does, it will be noteworthy for having done so without the aid and assistance of the talking heads on either Fox News or talk radio, ironically enough.

Charlize Theron and Armie Hammer (The Social Network) have apparently been offered roles in the new Clint Eastwood/Leonardo DiCaprio biopic of J. Edgar Hoover. Hammer would reportedly be playing Hoover’s ‘lover’ Clyde Tolson, although there is still some controversy about the exact nature of Tolson’s relationship with Hoover. Theron would be playing Hoover’s personal secretary of 54 years, Helen Gandy.

Speaking of Hoover and the FBI, by the way, the LA Times recently ran a piece clarifying Ronald Reagan’s rumored cooperation with the FBI in their hunt for communists in Hollywood.

The Jack Bauer/24 movie has apparently been put on temporary hold, after the last version of the screenplay didn’t satisfy Fox executives. However the latest rumor apparently has Tony Scott – who still intends to direct the Top Gun sequel – pitching a new 24 idea to Kiefer Sutherland himself, so there’s still some momentum left on that project.

The new Bond film is currently scheduled for a November 2012 release, incidentally.

• Take a few minutes to enjoy this animated short below, called Pigeon: Impossible from Lucas Martell. It’s about a rookie CIA agent who gets into hot water after a pigeon gets trapped inside his nuclear briefcase and sets off an ICBM toward Moscow. It’s a cute little story, and the quality of the animation is quite high.

• In other Cold War News & Notes:  another Die Hard sequel is apparently a ways off; the CW’s Nikita just got a full season ordered; there are a bunch of new set photos from Atlas Shrugged; and, odd to say, but the Tom Cruise-Cameron Diaz spy thriller Knight and Day actually ended up being Fox’s #1 hit of the year, grossing $262 million worldwide. Granted, $186 million of that came from overseas … [Read the LFM review of Knight and Day here.]

January Jones for Versace.

• … and speaking of Tom Cruise, by the way, some incredible set footage from Mission: Impossible 4 emerged recently of Cruise swinging around outside the upper floors of the Burj Khalifa tower in Dubai, where he’s roughly 2,000+ feet up. He even waves and smiles at the tourists watching him. I’ll say this for the guy, he always gives people their money’s worth. One other bit of related news: Ving Rhames may not be back for Mi4 – although, weirdly, he may be returning for the next Piranha film (didn’t he get chewed to pieces?).

• AND IN TODAY’S MOST IMPORTANT NEWS … January Jones – who will be playing Emma Frost in the swingin’ 60s/Cold War-themed X-Men: First Class – just did a series of provocative handbag ads for Versace, which is odd because she herself really doesn’t look like a bag at all.

And that’s what’s happening today in the Cold War!

Posted on December 20th, 2010 at 2:05pm.


Totalitarianism, Narcissism & Boomer Anxiety; LFM Reviews Tron: Legacy

The young/CGI Jeff Bridges as 'Clu,' dictator of The Grid in "Tron: Legacy."

By Jason Apuzzo. There’s a moment late in Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner when Rutger Hauer, playing the doomed replicant ‘Roy Batty,’ turns to Harrison Ford just before dying, and with a mad gleam in his eye ruminates:

“I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser Gate. All those moments will be lost in time … like tears in rain.”

It’s a wonderful, sad, poetic, insane moment – the soul of the film, actually, as this fantastic and vaguely Nietzschean character expires with unexpected grace, and in so doing teaches his pursuer (Ford, the titular ‘blade runner’) something about the true nature of ‘humanity.’

In trying to summarize what director Joseph Kosinski’s Tron: Legacy lacks, it’s precisely such moments – or even one such moment.  And it’s a shame, because I think that somewhere out there – perhaps still lurking in the interstices of the director’s imagination, or somewhere on his hard drive – there might actually have been a great science fiction film here, something perhaps south of Star Wars but certainly north of The Matrix. But as things stand, greatness was definitely left waiting on the table with respect to Tron: Legacy – this very big, very stylish and ambitious production that unfortunately never really takes flight as it should.

On the face of it, the idea of rebooting Tron was a decent idea, in so far as the cinema technology (CGI, 3D, etc.) currently exists today to flesh-out the basic Tron story in a more visually satisfying manner than was possible back in 1982.  And, of course, since the early 80s we’ve obviously developed a much more precise feeling for what ‘cyberspace’ and the internet mean to us, on both a practical and symbolic level.  Even just this week we learned, for example, that Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg is going to be Time’s Man of the Year – and the movie made about him (the weirdly uninvolving The Social Network) is very likely to win Best Picture at the Academy Awards in a few months.

Baby Boomer Jeff Bridges reflects ad ad nauseum on his legacy in "Tron: Legacy."

So on paper, the timing for this project should have been perfect. And yet I’m wondering if maybe it’s the exact opposite: that the timing for this film, in a sense, couldn’t be worse. Worse not because of the subject matter, nor because ‘computing’ has lost some of its romance and speculative luster since the early 80s – Steve Jobs notwithstanding. Continue reading Totalitarianism, Narcissism & Boomer Anxiety; LFM Reviews Tron: Legacy

Ayn Rand & Atlas Shrugged

Ayn Rand.

By David Ross. What sufficed the growing boy suffices the grown man. I read Ayn Rand’s entire oeuvre between the ages of fourteen and eighteen. It made an enormous impression in the usual ways, confirming my nascent conservatism and even more my nascent romanticism, on which paths, political and literary, I remain to this day. Rand led to Victor Hugo and George Sand, which led to my life’s work as a student of literature and circuitously to my permanent preoccupation with a certain romantic and conservative strand in modernism whose great avatar (if James Cameron has not entirely compromised the word) is William Butler Yeats. Rand also helped engender my reverence for the great achievers and achievements of civilization, which is, I believe, my greatest asset as a teacher to this day. Rand might not approve my heroes, but she would approve my penchant for hero worship. I have never sympathized with industrialism as a symbol or model of human creativity, nor desired to remake myself into an unsmiling and inflexible hero of what Rand calls rationalism, nor felt the need to hammer my haphazard libertarianism into consistent and rigid doctrine, but all the same I am her progeny. For better and worse, I have been formed by her in uncountable ineffable ways.

The Obama era was, for me as for so many others, an open invitation to reread Rand, so thoroughly does she seem to diagnose the psychology of our present slide into statism (Obama’s constant rhetoric about sibling-keeping might as well be plucked from the mouth of Wesley Mouch). News that Atlas Shrugged is finally being filmed also helped inch the book to the top of my pile (see Libertas’ interviews with director Paul Johannson here and here).

I was trepidacious, however, not sure to what extent I might have outgrown Rand. I was not concerned about the palatability of her philosophy, to which I have never specifically subscribed, but about her prose and her craftsmanship, which self-congratulatory journalist types constantly deride as second-rate, the kind of thing that only a teenager or cultist could fail to smirk at. This passing reference in a December article in the Weekly Standard is typical:

Atlas Shrugged, while a perennial bestseller and an important artifact of 20th-century culture, is not exactly great literature (stilted dialogue and cardboard characters have ranked among the defects pointed out by critics).

I have now reread the first half of Atlas Shrugged, and I can offer my very educated opinion that it is great literature, not necessarily at the sentence level, but in the unstoppable propulsion of its narrative (has a philosophical novel ever been so engrossing?), in the massive, dauntless sweep of its ideas, and in its enormous imaginative feat of creating a myth of our entire world (Dante and Milton are Rand’s compeers in this limited, formal respect).

Against the leveling instinct.

Even more, Atlas Shrugged is a great work of literature in its comprehensive taxonomy of modern men, in its comprehension of all their hidden springs and insecurities and frustrations and ambitions. Rand fancied herself a political theorist and metaphysician, but she misunderstood herself; she was a psychologist foremost, and Atlas Shrugged is a formidable system of psychology to contraindicate that of Freud. Eschewing the usual bedroom and bathroom preoccupations, Rand grasps that behavior is driven by what she calls ideals, conscious or unconscious structures of value that provide the context for everything we do and everything we are. Freud tends to reduce these structures to underlying psychosexual dynamics, but Rand insists on their primacy and irreducibility, and she illustrates their role as the ceaseless motive forces of life. She is also a particularly shrewd diagnostician of a certain kind of resentment and leveling instinct – James Taggart is the obvious embodiment – and she is nearly alone in realizing that this mindset is no trivial phenomenon but the rotting core of our world, explaining everything from the Soviet world-blight to our failing schools and lousy art.

Rand’s characters are ‘cardboard’ in the sense that they speak for philosophical positions and represent certain types, but each character embodies something slightly different; there is no overlap or redundancy. In the aggregate, they form a spectrum of humanity – a human comedy – that is convincing and powerfully explanatory. Rand is accused of engaging in moral black and white, but this is not entirely fair; while her scheme is moral in logic and purpose, many of her characters – Dr. Stadler for example – represent subtle, equivocal positions. They are not gray, but an intricate admixture of black and white.

Taylor Schilling as Dagny Taggart.

Rand sketches her characters in only a few clean strokes, but these strokes are rendered so deeply and forcefully as to be ineffaceable. Who can forget Hank Reardon or Dagny Taggart? Who can forget their triumphant inauguration of the John Galt Line? Who can forget their strange, violent lovemaking? What character drafted by Henry James, by contrast, does anything but deliquesce and drift imperceptibly from consciousness, becoming a vague haze of inflection and velleity?

Atlas Shrugged is a great novel, finally, in its astonishing originality. It has no precedent in terms of style, tone, mood, or philosophy, as far as I know. Victor Hugo may account for its sweep and social engagement, and someone like Zamyatin may have influenced its anti-totalitarianiasm and latent dystopianism, but nothing accounts for its strangeness, for everything powerfully eccentric and not infrequently repellent that Rand herself brings to it, everything rooted in the passionate kinks and quirks of her personality. In the end, it belongs in the category of the sui generis along with modern masterpieces like Ulysses, The Castle, and Pale Fire. It does not rival the artistry of these works, but it similarly emerges from a unique and bizarre mind.

Rand’s ultimate strength is her unswayable belief in herself as an arbiter of value and reality, and her passionate self-investment in every page she wrote. Her intent was doctrinaire, but her triumph is romantic.

Addenda:

  • See Rand on YouTube in all her rebarbative glory: here, here and here.
  • Whittaker Chamber’s fascinating, fiercely antagonistic, latently Christian review from the December 28, 1957, issue of National Review.
  • National Review’s contemporary take, likewise antagonistic.
  • The New York Times notes some of the book’s contemporary admirers, including Alan Greenspan.

Posted on December 17th, 2010 at 3:10pm.

Chaplin’s Modern Times: The Legacy

By Jason Apuzzo. Tomorrow brings Tron: Legacy, Disney’s $320 million attempt (including marketing costs) to ‘reboot’ a sci-fi franchise that never was. Naturally we will be reviewing it here at Libertas.

In the meantime, I’m wondering whether Tron will even be as good as this relatively quiet little sci-fi short above, called “Modern Times,” that was apparently made by some UK filmmakers for peanuts. It just arrived on Vimeo about a week ago.

And below, incidentally, I’ve put the Tron-ified Modern Times from Charlie Chaplin that filmmaker Nick Tierce did recently for the AintItCoolNews contest.

Posted on December 16th, 2010 at 12:04pm.