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Stanley Kubrick had been developing the project since the early 1970s. “Stanley gave up because he wanted to do this boy [in the film] by building a robot,” revealed producer Jan Harlan who worked with Kubrick for over thirty years. “The UK has very strict labour laws with children, and to make a film where the child is in every scene… We tried to build this robot which was a disaster. It just didn’t work. He also figured that computer graphics would be much, much better in a few years time.” Kubrick decided to give the directorial reins of the picture to Spielberg and planned to act as a producer. “Had he lived and given the direction to Steven Spielberg, he would have left Steven Spielberg completely alone,” believes Harlan. “He was a man who would never tolerate anybody interfering with him.” Jan Harlan was in agreement with the selection of Spielberg. “Steven is the only living director who had the authority to take this and make it his own, because he was authorized by Stanley himself.” As for what the movie would have been like if Stanley Kubrick had stayed behind the camera, Harlan remarked, “It's a Spielberg film. It's not a Kubrick film. Had Kubrick directed it, it would have been a different story. It would have been much, much darker.” The producer clarified his remark by adding, “It would still be the story about the boy who wants to become real, and the fairy tale. All of that was untouched by Steven. That’s all in Stanley’s script. It is just individual characters that were much more pessimistic and much darker.”
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“This is a world where humans feel in control because of their technological advances, but the reality is that they've become dependent on these 'mechas,' these mechanicized robots, to do everything for them,” remarked Jude Law. “In terms of giving Joe an organic energy that mixed with his mechanical side, I studied mime, some dance and even peacock movements. As a robot that is programmed to display various kinds of seductive behavior, I had to be skillful in the art of attraction, and multiple transformations and physical movements to go along with that.” To make the character more relatable to audience members, a compromise was made with the makeup. “At first they were going to give me prosthetic features for my entire face, but that idea was dropped as it was too synthetic looking. What they settled on eventually, in order to retain some human element, was a prosthetic jaw.”
Haley Joel Osment was initially intimidated by the idea of working with Steven Spielberg. “When I first got the role, I thought I'd be very nervous,” said Osment. “I really didn't know what to expect from him. But once I went in and met him, I immediately felt very relaxed. Once I got on the set, he made it all so easy.” Questioned on how he went about portraying his on-screen persona, the young actor replied, “We began with obvious things such as his body movements and his way of perceiving the world around him. Then we took those elements and gradually diluted them as the film progressed, so that you see David become less mechanical and more human. But we also kept some of his robotic characteristics through the whole story, so that you're always aware that he's still a robot underneath everything he learns.”
Upon being released, the $100 million production grossed $236 million worldwide and received Oscar nominations for Best Visual Effects and Best Original Score. At the BAFTAs, A.I. Artificial Intelligence contended for Best Special Effects and the Golden Globes nominated it for Best Director, Best Original Score and Best Supporting Actor – Drama (Jude Law). The Mainichi Film Concours presented the science fiction tale with the Reader’s Choice Award for Best Foreign Language Film, while the Young Artists Awards handed out nominations for Best Young Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture (Jake Thomas) and Best Young Actor in a Motion Picture (Haley Joel Osment).
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“Science fiction has always been a first level alert to things to come. It's easier for an audience to take warnings from sci-fi without feeling that we're preaching to them,” stated Spielberg. “I tried to set the movie in a current reality… because I wanted it to be relatable to today.” In the movie, the computer that Tom Cruise (Top Gun) uses by waving his hands around was based on a working prototype built at the MIT Media Lab. “I ended up building a system called the Luminous Room that was all about bringing together input and output and letting people attach digital meanings to physical objects,” revealed John Underkoffler, the Chief Scientist at Oblong Industries. “I was just finishing that work in about 1999 when the Minority Report pre-production team visited my lab.” The hardest film set to create was the containment chamber prison. “It was a set that stayed dormant for a long time because Spielberg had a vision of a graveyard with headstones,” recalled production designer Alex McDowell (Fight Club). “And beneath those headstones were all of these people in storage. We went to giant underground locations. We looked around a lot for somewhere that could contain that. But there were a lot of practical issues, and the vision was hard for everyone to get their head around.” Another challenge for McDowell and his team was the construction of the jet-propelled police backpacks. “Most of that design work was done with 3D design and animation. The props in this movie were complex and expensive because they had to work, and they had to look really good close-up.”
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Minority Report stars the acting talents of Colin Farrell (The Way Back), Max von Sydow (Snow Falling on Cedars), Steve Harris (Bringing Down the House), Neal McDonough (88 Minutes), and Kathryn Morris (Resurrecting the Champ). The Hollywood production cost $102 million to make and earned $358 million worldwide. The science fiction tale received an Oscar nomination for Best Sound Editing as well as one from the BAFTAs for Best Special Visual Effects. The American Cinema Editors nominated the picture for Best Edited Feature Film – Dramatic, and the Young Artists Awards handed out nominations for Best Young Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture (Andrew Sandler) and Best Young Actor Under Ten in a Motion Picture (Dominic Scott Kay). At the César Awards in France, Minority Report contended for Best Foreign Film.
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As for why he did not change the various real life exploits of the character played by Leonardo DiCaprio, Steven Spielberg stated, “The reason I couldn't embellish the scams is that I don't have the imagination he did. As a fiction director I never could have dreamt up how he always eluded the FBI [and Carl Hanratty].” In the eyes of his director, DiCaprio embodied Frank Abagnale, Jr.. “Leo had such a wiley intelligence in his eyes, he had such a great presentational style. Frank got away with everything he got away with based on 80% presentation, only 20% imagination.” Amongst Spielberg’s favourite scam movies are The Flim-Flam Man (1967), Scarecrow (1973), Elmer Gantry (1960), The Sting (1973) and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969). “This is one kind of example where life is more imaginative than art,” marvelled the filmmaker who wanted to brighten the cinematic atmosphere of the picture. “I said to Janusz [Kaminski], ‘We've done all these dark, backlit, contrasty movies for almost nine years. Let's, for the first time, put lights right in people's faces. Let's make this whole era blossom the way I remembered it.’”
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“Viktor is not a clown and he is not a buffoon,” believes Spielberg. “We are not making fun of an immigrant from a fictitious land around the Black Sea. In fact he is a very dignified person who is extremely trusting and is always filled with positive hope.” Cast as the endearing main character is Tom Hanks who observed, “Viktor is in a position where he says, ‘Hey, one of the best things that’s ever happened to me is that I got stuck in an airport for awhile and I got to meet this lady.’” The lady in question is flight attendant Amelia Warren portrayed by Catherine Zeta-Jones. “She is always looking for love and trying to find a person who will be her prince,” reflected Zeta-Jones. “Amelia is desperate to have someone to talk to and listen to her; she finds that person in Viktor.” For Hanks, the tale is not entirely fanciful, “It is a very adult relationship that is a recognition of a kindred soul who could use some help.”
The airport setting allowed for a lot of lucrative product placement deals for the $60 million Hollywood production. “It was a similar situation for The Terminal as for Minority Report,” said production designer Alex McDowell, “that in order to portray a real world, you've got to accept that advertising, and product and corporate puff is in your frame. It gives you back a value.” Starring performers such as Stanley Tucci (The Devil Wears Prada), Barry Shabaka Henley (Miami Vice), Kumar Pallana (Rushmore), Diego Luna (Criminal), Chi McBride (I, Robot), and Zoë Saldana (Star Trek), the movie grossed $219 million worldwide. The reception for The Terminal was equally divided among film critics. Peter Howell of The Toronto Star wrote, “The small joys it has to offer are wholly dependent on the willingness of the audience to indulge in the proverbial suspension of disbelief. And believe me, much indulging is necessary.” At the New York Observer, Rex Reed was of an entirely different attitude; he wrote, “A feel-good film of such originality and sweetness in a summer of otherwise derivative sequels and remakes that it practically qualifies for miracle status.”
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Shot over seventy-three days in Connecticut, New York, California, Virginia, and New Jersey, the Hollywood production used five different sound stages. The story features narration by Morgan Freeman (Unforgiven) as well as appearances by Ann Robinson (Gun Brothers) and Gene Barry (Soldier of Fortune) who were the lead actors in the 1953 version; other cast members in the $132 million invasion epic include Dakota Fanning (The Runaways), Justin Chatwin (The Invisible), Miranda Otto (Flight of the Phoenix), Tim Robbins (Mystic River), Rick Gonzalez (In the Valley of Elah), Lenny Venito (Solitary Man), and Lisa Ann Walter (Bruce Almighty). Long-time Spielberg collaborator and producer Kathleen Kennedy noted, “When we first started developing E.T. [1982] and Close Encounters of the Third Kind [1977], it was a much edgier, darker story which evolved into something that was more benign. I think that the edgier, darker story has always been somewhere inside him. Now he’s telling the story.” The movie was shrouded in secrecy at the request of the director. “I know some people would always say, ‘Oh, everything is so secret,’” recalled Miranda Otto. “I think it’s good. In the old days people didn’t get to know much about movies before they came out and nowadays there’s just so much information.”
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Reacting to the controversy surrounding the “happy ending”, the director stated, “I have hope for the future, which is probably why I'm not the best person to tell a story that leaves you with nothing to hope for.” The science fiction picture earned $592 million in worldwide box office receipts and was praised by Ken Tucker of New York Magazine who wrote, “Steven Spielberg’s War of the Worlds is huge and scary, moving and funny – another capper to a career that seems like an unending succession of captivations.” Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore was less enamored, he wrote, “Spielberg is pretty much incapable of making a terrible movie anymore. But he has plainly forgotten a lot of what makes a good popcorn movie since his Jurassic period. Where’s the fun?” The Academy Awards nominated War of the Worlds for Best Sound Editing, Best Sound Mixing, and Best Visual Effects while the Razzie Awards handed out a nomination for Worst Actor (Tom Cruise).
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“Naturally, it is a terrible, despicable crime when, as in Munich, people are taken hostage, people are killed,” remarked Steven Spielberg who elected to take a balanced point of view with the controversial subject matter. “But probing the motives of those responsible and showing that they also are individuals with families and have their own story does not excuse what they did. Wanting to understand the background to a murder doesn't mean you accept it.” As for his cinematic portrayal of the government ordered assassins as being self-doubting accomplices, the director remarked, “Every single Israeli reprisal was also designed to cause fear and terror in the enemy. I don't believe that any of the agents involved enjoyed killing, or took pleasure in hiding a bomb under the target's bed. Killing was the job of these men, and they did it as well as they could. At the start they were all convinced they were doing the right thing – and they couldn't begin to imagine what the consequences would be for themselves, for their personal development, for their own souls.” Spielberg added, “A campaign of vengeance, even though it may contribute towards deterrence and preventing terror, can also have unintended consequences. It can change people, burden them, brutalize them, lead to their ethical decline. Even Mossad agents do not have ice water flowing through their veins.”
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Australian actor Eric Bana (Hulk), who portrays Avner in the $70 million Hollywood production, stars alongside Daniel Craig (Casino Royale), Ciarán Hinds (The Debt), Mathieu Kassovitz (Birthday Girl), Hanns Zischler (In the Shadows), Ayelet Zurer (Angels & Demons), Geoffrey Rush (Shine), Gila Almagor (Three Mothers), Michael Lonsdale (Moonraker), Mathieu Amalric (Quantum of Solace), and Moritz Bleibtreu (Soul Kitchen). Munich grossed $130 million worldwide and received Oscar nominations for Best Director, Best Editing, Best Original Score, Best Picture, and Best Adapted Screenplay. The American Cinema Editors nominated the historical thriller for Best Edited Feature Film – Dramatic, while Steven Spielberg was honoured with a nomination from the Directors Guild of America. At the Golden Globes, Munich contended for Best Director and Best Screenplay.
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“George came up with the idea that he wanted to do a paranormal story that would be a cross between psychic phenomena and the whole UFO craze,” recalled the filmmaker. “But I had done E.T., and I had done Close Encounters… I’d had my fill of extra-terrestrials, so I resisted for many years.” Steven Spielberg chuckled, “Working with George is still the same. We still argue, we still compromise, and we still deal with each other like the brothers we are.” George Lucas remained undaunted. “The compromise was I wouldn’t have any flying saucers in this movie,” revealed Lucas, “but I would have aliens. That’s when I came up with the Lost City of the Gods, with a crystal skull as the MacGuffin.” The idea intrigued Spielberg. “I had heard about the crystal skulls,” said the director. “Whether you believe that the crystal skull was carved by humans or an entity beyond the human race is the stuff that legends are made of.”
Filmmaker Frank Darabont (The Shawshank Redemption) was recruited to script the idea; he completed his third draft on November 4, 2003. “After more than a year of working closely with Steven Spielberg developing the story,” remembered Darabont, “I had completed a screenplay that Steven loved and was hoping to shoot. However, George Lucas had issues with the script and slammed on the brakes in order to rework the material himself.” Jeff Nathanson was brought in as a replacement but he soon found himself serving two conflicting masters. “Finally I approached an old friend and collaborator who had written brilliantly for me, beginning with Jurassic Park [1993] – that would be David Koepp,” said Spielberg. “I considered him to be more than likely our ‘closer’ – our best bet to get this leviathan onto thousands of movie screens.” David Koepp had no intention of wiping the creative slate entirely clean. “It’s the fourth time I’ve written a movie for Steven,” remarked Koepp who wrote the first two Jurassic Park pictures and War of the Worlds. “Every time is different. In this case I tried to be aware of the history of the project. They had worked on a number of scripts over the years, with a number of writers, so I tried to be mindful of what worked and what didn’t.” The contributions of Koepp’s screenwriting predecessor had a major impact on the project. “When Frank Darabont did his draft for me,” explained Steven Spielberg, “he introduced the idea of bringing Marion back. I accepted it and Frank put it into the script. When David Koepp came in, Marion was one of the ideas I tenaciously held on to.” The director encountered no opposition from his frequent screenwriting collaborator. “In Raiders [of the Lost Ark, 1981] you fell desperately in love with Marion,” confided Koepp. “The fact that they ended up not getting together beyond Raiders was maddening. So, in this one, Marion is the focus of the search; Indy doesn’t know it, but she is what he’s been searching for the last twenty years.” The reunion idea was expanded upon. “Once we put Marion in the movie,” began George Lucas, “we first thought there should be a daughter Indy didn’t know about. She was going to be thirteen, a little spitfire. But Steven said, ‘I’ve done that in The Lost World [1997].’ Eventually, David Koepp revisited the idea with a son and it worked, though their idea was to make him a nerd. I said, ‘That isn’t going to work. He needs to be like Marlon Brando in The Wild One [1953]. He needs to be what Indiana Jones’ father thought of Indiana Jones.’”
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Missing from the cast that features Karen Allen (In the Bedroom), Shia LaBeouf (Eagle Eye), Ray Winstone (Sexy Beast), John Hurt (V for Vendetta), Jim Broadbent (Iris), and Igor Jijikine (The Tourist) was Sean Connery (The Man Who Would Be King). “I love working with Steven and George, and it goes without saying that it is an honour to have Harrison as my son,” announced Connery in a press release. “But in the end, retirement is just too damned much fun. I do, however, have one bit of advice for Junior. Demand that the critters be digital, the cliffs be low, and for goodness sake, keep that whip by your side at all times in case you need to escape from the stunt coordinator!” Moviegoers were eager to welcome back Harrison Ford and his trusty bullwhip; Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull grossed $787 million worldwide prompting talk of a fifth installment. The action-adventure received a BAFTA nomination for Best Special Visual Effects and contended for Outstanding Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Motion Picture at the Screen Actors Guild Awards. The Razzie Awards lauded the film with the trophy for Worst Prequel, Remake, Rip-off or Sequel.
Entering the arena of American politics, Steven Spielberg produced A Timeless Call (2008), a seven minute U.S. veteran tribute documentary narrated by Tom Hanks which was screened at the 2008 Democratic convention. During that same year, DreamWorks ended its partnership with Paramount Pictures and signed a $1.5 billion deal with India’s Reliance ADA Group reestablishing the studio as an independent entity. Remaining a key player in the success of the studio is its Ohio born co-founder. With a career spanning over five decades, Steven Spielberg is the rare international filmmaker who has achieved both critical acclaim and major commercial appeal; his twenty-five films have generated over $8 billion at the worldwide box office; five of them have been inducted into the National Film Registry for preservation: E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1994), Raiders of the Lost Ark (1999), Jaws (2001), Schindler’s List (2004), and Close Encounters of the Third Kind (2007). “I have enough success to last me three more lifetimes,” stated Spielberg, “so I turned down Harry Potter and I turned down Spider-Man, two movies that I knew would be phenomenally successful because I had already made movies like that before and they offered no challenge to me.” The director continued, “I think after my experience with Schindler’s List [1993], Amistad [1997] and Saving Private Ryan [1998], I realized that there are two kinds of movies I can be making: movies that are entertaining and please many people or movies that please me and give me satisfaction in a very meaningful way.”
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Shooting the picture digitally and utilizing the motion-capture technology, Steven Spielberg believed to be the best way to honour the source material. “It was based on my respect for the art of Hergé and wanting to get as close to that art as I could,” said the filmmaker. “Hergé wrote about fictional people in a real world, not in a fantasy universe. It was the real universe he was working with, and he used National Geographic to research his adventure stories. It just seemed that live action would be too stylized for an audience to relate to. You’d have to have costumes that are a little outrageous when you see actors wearing them. The costumes seem to fit better when the medium chosen is a digital one.” Normally an advocate for shooting using film, Spielberg admitted, “I just adored it. It made me more like a painter than ever before. I got a chance to do so many jobs that I don’t often do as a director. You get to paint with this device that puts you into a virtual world, and allows you to make your shots and block all the actors with a small hand-held device only three times as large as an Xbox game controller.”
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Numerous projects are currently under development by Steven Spielberg; they include the science fiction picture Interstellar, being written by Jonathan Nolan (The Dark Knight); the story explores the theories of physicist Kip Thorne in regards to gravity fields and wormholes. A possible collaboration with Oscar-winning screenwriter Diablo Cody (Juno) would see the director delve into the William Shakespeare theatrical cannon with The Taming of the Shrew. He has also purchased the film rights to Michael Crichton’s last novel, the seafaring adventure Pirates Latitude. “I’ve always wanted to make a musical so I’ve been looking for twenty years for something that would excite me,” divulged the veteran filmmaker. “I admired Moulin Rouge! [2001] but I don’t want to make one that is impressionistic. If I do a musical it will be conservative and old-fashioned with everybody talking to each other, they break into song and then they talk some more! I like West Side Story [1961] and Singin' in the Rain [1952], which I think, is the best musical ever made. I’m also interested in doing the Abraham Lincoln story, of the last five years of his life in the Civil War.” Looking back over his career, Steven Spielberg remarked, “Every movie I make is a new challenge. I’ll have big hit movies and I’ll have movies that aren’t big hits. That’s just what happens when you’re a filmmaker and you’re putting your things out there for the public to applaud or yawn at. Through all that, I hope I don’t lose my ambition and my love for starting something new and seeing it through to the end.”
Read Frank Darabont's unused screenplay for Indiana Jones and the City of the Gods and for more on Spielberg and his upcoming projects check out the official Dreamworks website here.
Related:
Five Essential Films of Steven Spielberg
Short Film Showcase - Amblin' (1968)
Short Film Showcase - Duel (1971)
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
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