Top 10 Films of 2014

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Contributed by Tom Stockman, Jim Batts, Melissa Howland, Travis Keune, Michael Haffner, Melissa Thompson and Michelle McCue

Going to the cinemas in 2014 was part emotional, part uproarious, and part interstellar thrill ride – there were a lot of movies to see this past year.

The everlasting bond between a parent and a child, courageous real life heroes, superheroes – past, present and future and their gripping stories of bravery graced the silver screen as well as our year ends lists. As a collective audience, we cried with them, we laughed with them and we cheered for them.

With the 323 films eligible for Best Picture at the upcoming 87th Academy Awards, have a look back at the movie-going experiences that was 2014.

We Are Movie Geeks presents our Top 10 films of 2014.

Let us know your favorites by adding your top 10 films in our comments section below.

HONORABLE MENTION – NIGHTCRAWLER

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NIGHTCRAWLER imparts a healthy amount of social commentary into a haunting and dark character study of one very determined journalist willing to do whatever it takes to survive in LA. It is through Lou’s journey into the depths of the crime world that director Dan Gilroy is able to speak about the dog-eat-dog world of business and the political slant of the media. Intense, nail biting, and shocking, NIGHTCRAWLER delivers an explosive finale that will leave you shaken. (review)

10. DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES

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Fans of the franchise were delivered another thrilling installment to the Planet of the Apes series. The critically praised DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES rode once again on the shoulders of conflicted leader Caesar, played with powerful depth by actor Andy Serkis. Along with composer Michael Giacchino’s emotional score, director Matt Reeves’ sequel to 2011’s RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES was this summer’s soulful, intelligent blockbuster. (review)

9. GONE GIRL

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David Fincher might have outdone himself with his latest film GONE GIRL. The performances, especially Ben Affleck, along with an incredible plot are reason enough for this film to being home some awards this season. Just be careful. This film might hit home a bit too much for some viewers.  (review)

8. LIFE ITSELF

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In a year of superb documentary features, Steve James delivers a film that engages both the mind and the heart. It’s a terrific overview of the remarkable career of Pulitzer Prize winning movie reviewer Roger Ebert with great insight into the newspaper and show biz world. But more importantly it’s a very moving love story, first with competitor and TV co-star Gene Siskel, and at the end with his soul mate, the indomitable Chaz Ebert.

7. THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING

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Inspiring film biographies of triumph over adversity usually dominate the theatres near the end of the year in cinema, but this one gave audiences an unexpected bonus. Eddie Redmayne shows us the very human side of the genius who defied the odds of living with ALS. But it’s Felicity Jones who is the story’s beating heart as his wife Jane who inspired him to great heights with her unconditional love. It doesn’t tie up the tale in a nice little bow, but reflects the complications of true life. (review)

6. THE LEGO MOVIE

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Few animated films are as chock full of contemporary pop culture nostalgia as THE LEGO MOVIE. This, along with the uniquely magical stop motion animation using actual Lego toys, combine to create a cinematic experience that both child and adult can enjoy on a level playing field, time and again… even if “Everything is Awesome” does become annoying after the first 10-20 times your kids recite the song. (review)

Even the bloopers were hilarious!

5. GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY

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What can we say that hasn’t already been said about GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY? Writer/Director James Gunn takes audiences on a galactic thrill ride that will leave you laughing and touch your heart. After all, we are Groot!  (review)

4. THE IMITATION GAME

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During WWII, brilliant mathematician Alan Turing is hired to break the German Enigma code which involves pioneering computer work. Unfortunately, Turing is homosexual in an age where homosexuality is illegal, and there are those who seek to bring him down by whatever means possible. With a smart script and great performances by hot actors, IMITATION GAME is the perfect film for those interested in history, wartime intrigue, technology, and the struggles of visionaries way ahead of their time.

3. THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL

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THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL is a terrific film and perhaps Wes Anderson’s best, an exhilarating experience thanks in part to a superior rapid-fire script but mostly to a magnificent central character played by Ralph Fiennes. Anderson keeps the story moving at a madcap Marx Brothers-style pace and the movie is packed with tasty dialogue, looks stunning thanks to Adam Stockhausen’s meticulous production design and sounds unique due to Alexandre Desplat’s Cossacky score. Wes Anderson is one of the few true originals currently working in American cinema. (review)

2. BOYHOOD

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BOYHOOD may be labeled as a film, but a more apt description would be a unique experience that is truly unforgettable. As Ethan Hawke’s father figure responds when Mason inquires about “the point of all this,” it’s as if the whole of the film rests on his response: “You’re feeling things, and that’s what is important.” (review)

1. BIRDMAN: THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE

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BIRDMAN is such a complex look at the artistic process that it’s hard to even put into words all that it encompasses. Even more so, it is an incredibly ambitious meta experiment from director Alejandro González Iñárritu that pays off. The film is presented as a work of art while deconstructing what it means to be a working artist. You can’t help but stare in awe at the majesty of this triumphant and artistic masterpiece. (review)

Not to be left off the list, we decided to add some of our best surprises from 2014. This includes THE SKELETON TWINS, JOHN WICK, MALEFICENT, LUCY, and THE RAID 2.

The one that caught our eye was THE BABADOOK. As Michael Haffner wrote in his review,

“Between the cold, almost black and white photography, and slow building dread, THE BABADOOK feels like a classic tale of psychological horror. Jennifer Kent brings out a strong performance from the talented Essie Davis, but it’s her approach to real life anxieties and everyday horror that makes THE BABADOOK a must-see for non-horror fans and horror fans alike.”

Here are some of the most anticipated films coming to theaters in 2015:

  • STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS
  • JURASSIC WORLD
  • AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON
  • THE MARTIAN
  • JUPITER ASCENDING
  • TERMINATOR GENISYS
  • BOND 24: SPECTRE
  • FURIOUS 7
  • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD
  • TOMORROWLAND
  • INSIDE OUT
  • TED 2
  • FIFTY SHADES OF GREY
  • MINIONS
  • MAGIC MIKE XXL
  • ANT MAN
  • CRIMSON PEAK
  • THE GOOD DINOSAUR
  • THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY – PART 2
  • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT
  • KUNG FU PANDA 3
  • THE REVENANT 
  • KRAMPUS
  • THE WALK
  • PEANUTS
  • CHAPPIE
  • CINDERELLA
  • IN THE HEART OF THE SEA
  • SISTERS
  • PITCH PERFECT 2
  • THE WOMAN IN BLACK: ANGEL OF DEATH
  • EVEREST
  • KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE
  • VICTOR FRANKENSTEIN
  • PAN
  • POLTERGEIST
  • THE SEVENTH SON
  • MIDNIGHT SPECIAL

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The individual favorites from the WAMG team:

Jim Batts

Honorable Mention: THE SKELETON TWINS

10. JODOROWSKY’S DUNE
9. THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL
8. GONE GIRL
7. THE IMITATION GAME
6. THE BOXTROLLS
5. LIFE ITSELF
4. GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY
3. CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER
2. BIRDMAN: THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE
1. BOYHOOD

Best Surprise: THE BABADOOK, OBVIOUS CHILD

Tom Stockman

Honorable Mention:  JOE

10. A MOST VIOLENT YEAR
9. BIG EYES
8. SIN CITY 2: A DAME TO KILL FOR
7. ENEMY
6. DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES
5. THE IMITATION GAME
4. THE GAMBLER
3. THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL
2. UNDER THE SKIN
1. BIRDMAN: THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE

Best Surprise: THE RAID 2

Melissa Howland

Honorable Mention: THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING

10. BIG HERO 6
9. THE BABADOOK
8. GONE GIRL
7. FURY
6. WHIPLASH
5. THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL
4. NIGHTCRAWLER
3. BIRDMAN: THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE
2. BOYHOOD
1. GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY

Best Surprise: MALEFICENT

Michael Haffner

Honorable Mentions: NIGHTCRAWLER, IDA

10. THE LEGO MOVIE
9. THE BABADOOK
8. THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING
7. ENEMY
6. THE IMITATION GAME
5. WHIPLASH
4. SPRING
3. LIFE ITSELF
2. THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL
1. TIE: BOYHOOD and BIRDMAN: THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE

Best Surprise: JOHN WICK, LUCY

Michelle McCue

Honorable Mention: UNDER THE SKIN

10. NOAH
9. FURY
8. BIRDMAN: THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE
7. AMERICAN SNIPER
6. THE LEGO MOVIE
5. THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING
4. DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES
3. BOYHOOD
2. GONE GIRL
1. INTERSTELLAR

Best Surprise: JOHN WICK, SNOWPIERCER

Travis Keune

10. HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2
9.  X-MEN: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST
8. BIG HERO 6
7. GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY
6. THE LEGO MOVIE
5. ONLY LOVERS LEFT ALIVE
4. LOCKE
3. THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL
2. SNOWPIERCER
1. BLUE RUIN

Melissa Thompson

10. INTERSTELLAR
9. TAMMY
8. BIG HERO 6
7. MALEFICENT
6. ST. VINCENT
5. NOAH
4. GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY
3. GLEN CAMPBELL: I’LL BE ME
2. MY OLD LADY
1. INTO THE WOODS

JAMES GUNN Talks GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY With WAMG

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By now, most of you are familiar with the galactic awesomeness that is GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY, but for those of you that have been hiding under a rock on Knowhere, you’re in luck because this spunky bunch of A-holes are making their way to Blu-Ray on December 9th.

Last week, I talked with writer/director/animal enthusiast James Gunn about his feelings before releasing the film, the upcoming sequel and, of course, Michael Rooker. Check it out below.

Before the film was released, there were a ton of headlines about James Gunn being terrified to release GUARDIANS. The film’s coming to Blu-ray now, and has done incredibly well, so I’m wondering what scares you now?

JAMES GUNN : Well, I wasn’t terrified of releasing the movie. I was terrified because I didn’t know how I was going to live my life without having Rocket in it everyday. I mean, it’s simple. [Laughs] It really is. I had grown so attached to Rocket and Groot. I’d been with them every day for countless hours on end. They were like my children, and I thought there was a chance the movie would come out – what if the movie came out and it didn’t do very well? I wouldn’t be able to see them again. I was just terrified. I was also terrified that I really just didn’t want to let it go. The movie and the creation of it became a part of the fabric of my existence, and it had become everything that I was doing for two years. It was like, where the fuck was I gonna go when all this was done. Not physically, but emotionally. I didn’t know. That’s what I was afraid of.

At what point did you really start thinking about the sequel? You’ve stated that you always kind of had it in mind when you were creating the first one, but at what point did you really start thinking about it?

JAMES GUNN : I would say… I was sitting with Simon (Hatt, his assistant) in my trailer about halfway through shooting, and I was like ‘Here’s what the sequel is’… [laughs] and I made him sit down and start taking notes.That was really when, I think, the sequel started to come together. I think the next big leap was on the day the movie was released, I sat down and I wrote out all the basic, you know – story of what the sequel would be on August 1st. Those are the two moments where it started to come together.

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I was looking today, and I cannot find a single instance where a sequel was announced before the release of the original film. I may be wrong to say this is a first, but does that add any pressure to you? Having the sequel announced before the release of the original film?  

JAMES GUNN : Um… No. Listen, here’s the thing. If the movie didn’t do well they would have just unannounced the sequel. I was somewhat comforted in them announcing the sequel. I think by that time we thought the movie wasn’t going to do as well as it did, but we thought the movie was going to make 60 million on opening weekend. It was tracking for that. I mean, we made 94. Even if it made 50 million opening weekend it probably would have warranted a sequel. Also by that timeframe we knew that the reviews were beyond good. I was happy to know that I was going to have a job for the next couple of years.

At the original junket, I asked [Michael] Rooker about how you made him a monster in SLITHER, covered him in blood during ‘Scream Queens’, and painted him blue for GUARDIANS. Why are you trying to cover up his beauty? He says that you’re just jealous! [Check out Rooker’s full answer and interview HERE]

JAMES GUNN : You know, my turds are jealous of Rooker’s face, but I think that’s all that’s jealous of Rooker’s face! [Laughs] You know who really has it bad is my brother Sean, who I’ve repeatedly killed in movies. In TROMEO AND JULIET we had to shave his head to have three different little ponytails, as ‘Alien Orphan’ in THE SPECIALS we had to shave his head bald, in SUPER he had to have this god-awful guido cut, and as ‘Kraglin’ he has this screwed up mohawk! What I’ve done to Rooker is not as much as what I’ve done to Sean. I obviously have some deep resentment toward him, so… [Laughs]

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Most people are familiar that you’re friends with Rooker, Nathan Fillion, and of course your brother, but what a lot of people might not recognize is that you have a couple more of your close friends in the film. What are some of the benefits, creatively, of being able to include friends in your projects? 

 JAMES GUNN : Frankly, directing is a pretty isolating thing. For me, it was cool to just have those moments when things are going crazy that I can go over and just kind of lean on somebody’s shoulder for a second, and that’s what people like my brother Sean, Michael Rooker, and Stevie Blackehart, who’s been in my last couple of movies – those people do that for me. And truthfully Chris Pratt and I did that same thing to each other. So, it’s nice to have that.

Has Kevin Bacon gotten back to you about him being referenced in the film?

JAMES GUNN : Oh yeah! He got back to me immediately. He was delighted. [Laughs] He was very stoked, and he took it as a big compliment. He just thought it was funnier than hell! Not only that, but Krya (Sedgwick) was writing me about how funny it was on Twitter. She loved it. Kevin is just one of the best guys I’ve ever met, not just as an actor but as a human being. I really like him, as an actor especially. He’s just the easiest person I’ve ever worked with. It’s really cool that I got to put him in there.

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From Marvel, the studio that launched the epic franchises of “Iron Man,” “Thor,” “Captain America” and “Marvel’s The Avengers,” comes an unlikely new team—the “Guardians of the Galaxy.”  The Marvel Cinematic Universe expands into the cosmos when brash space adventurer Peter Quill steals a coveted orb and becomes the object of a relentless bounty hunt. To evade his enemies, Quill forges an uneasy truce with Rocket, a gun-toting raccoon; Groot, a tree-like humanoid; the deadly assassin Gamora; and the revenge-driven Drax. But when Quill discovers the true power of the orb, he must rally his ragtag band of misfits for a desperate battle that will decide the fate of the galaxy. Featuring amazing new characters and exclusive bonus features, this must-own blockbuster will have you hooked on a feeling… of pure adrenaline!

GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY makes its way to Digital SD, 3D Blu-ray Combo pack, Blu-ray, DVD and On-Demand December 9th

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WAMG Talks HORNS With DANIEL RADCLIFFE

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HORNS is in theaters and On-Demand just in time to quench your fantasy withdrawal now that Halloween has come and gone. Last week, WAMG sat down with star Daniel Radcliffe in a small press conference to talk about his role of Ig in the film, SHARKNADO 2 : THE SECOND ONE (because, why not?), and his sweet flow on ‘The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon.’ Check it out below.

Based on the novel by Joe Hill, Horns is a supernatural thriller driven by fantasy, mystery and romance. The film follows Ig Perrish (Daniel Radcliffe, “Harry Potter” films), the number one suspect for the violent rape and murder of his girlfriend, Merrin (Juno Temple). Hungover from a night of hard drinking, Ig awakens one morning to find horns starting to grow from his own head and soon realizes their power drives people to confess their sins and give in to their most selfish and unspeakable impulses – an effective tool in his quest to discover the true circumstances of his late girlfriend’s tragedy and for exacting revenge on her killer.

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What it is about the allegory that Joe created in the novel, that was then translated into the script that let you come back into this serpentine world of a little biblical flair?

DANIEL RADCLIFFE : Yeah, I mean, that’s the thing. I suppose because Joe’s world in and of itself is so striking, and real, and exciting that there was never a moment where I was thinking… and you know, I think because Potter was such a part of my life I never think of the comparisons that other people might make, or similarities that might be drawn. The thing that attracted me to it was just the fact that it was so bold, and so heartbreaking and beautiful, and the story of this guys journey was something that I really connected to. And I felt like the allegory of turning into what you’re perceived as or feeling like an outsider, or being made to feel like an outsider is very strong, and something that I, and hopefully a lot of people can connect to.

Was it kind of fun having the reporters attack each other, or would you like to have that happen? [Laughs]

DANIEL RADCLIFFE : Yeah! Absolutley.

We could recreate that here!

DANIEL RADCLIFFE : Yeah! I was just going to say! This is kind of a fine opportunity! [laughs] Um. That’s a great scene. I won’t lie, like I took no small pleasure in that moment of catharsis. I mean, yeah. It’s one of the fun parts of the film, as well. It’s great that you have all of those great, fun moments in the film because the film also takes some dark, heavy turns as well. Yeah, I mean. I promise that I don’t think of you all in that way, but if I could hand-pick five or six journalists from the UK and sort of arrange a cage fight, I would. [Laughs]

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Tell us about wearing the horns. Were they heavy? After a while did they start to look normal?

DANIEL RADCLIFFE : They looked really normal, and really quickly. That was what was remarkable about them, was that… Whenever you see a line in a script, and it says ‘The character has horns’ you go ‘Well, in my imagination that sounds fantastic, but how will it actually look?’ So, the first time I saw them on it was kind of a combination of relief, because they looked fantastic, and excitement. When you have something stuck to your head that can go either way. That has the potential to look silly, and it really doesn’t. The word ‘organic’ is one of my sort of most hated, overused words ‘Oh, just make it organic’ but they do. They look like they’re made out of organic material, and actually coming from my head. They only took, like, twenty minutes to put on. They were really fast.

With the inditement that these people [in the film] make, and how quickly they are to judge, are you able to relate and what could you bring to that from your experience? 

DANIEL RADCLIFFE : Sure. I mean I definitely think that you relate, and magnify and distort things from your own life to help working as an actor. Definitely a theme in my life has been the gap between how I’m perceived and who I know myself to be… not that anyone has ever thought that I’ve killed someone, but the idea and the principle are kind of the same.

I’m curious about your experience working with the snakes in the film, and also Daniel, during the HORNS press conference at Comic-Con you mentioned your excitement for SHARKNADO 2 and I’m just curious if it lived up to the hype?

DANIEL RADCLIFFE : It totally did, obviously! [Laughs] It’s fantastic! And then, like a day later I met Tara Reid, and Ian Zering over the course of the next few days and was able to wax lyrical about it. I have a real affection for films like that, and with the second one, they knew even more, like they were even more self-aware and knew more what people liked about it and were able to make it bigger, and louder, and sillier, and fun. So, yeah, it was great… and what was the first part of your question? Snakes! [Laughs] They were fantastic! I actually didn’t know before doing the movie if I was comfortable with snakes. Turns out I’m extremely comfortable with snakes. I may have been completely projecting human emotions onto this creature, but I became completely convinced that she was very affectionate by the end. Because they get cold. Snakes aren’t cold-blooded. This was my favorite word I leaned on the shoot: they’re ‘poikilothermic,’ which means they can’t control their body temperature. So, whatever temperature it is outside, they will be. So they’re freezing, and then you’re really warm so they just love you and they just hug you, [laughs] but not in a constricting kind of way. So yeah, I really like them. We had one scene with a hundred live snakes, which was awesome. Yeah. Talk to Max Minghella about snakes. He’s not such a fan.

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In this movie your characters are also played by actors at a younger age, and it got me to thinking about Jodie Foster’s comments on CONTACT, and how her performance was informed by Jena Malone’s. I was wondering if you had a similar experience with that, or if it was the other way around?

DANIEL RADCLIFFE : It was interesting because we didn’t really see a tremendous amount of what the kids were doing.I was off when they were doing stuff… I would be getting made up, or de-made up, or something would be going on so they would try to time it like that, so I really didn’t get to see a lot what they were doing. I got to spend a lot of time particularly with Mitchell on the movie. Mitchell is like I was when I was 13. He’s a kid from Winnipeg, and he’s like, a kid. He must be 14 now. He’s awesome… I just like the face that he’s blonde naturally. He’s got much fairer hair than I do, and they dyed his hair on the first day. And he went back to his hotel in Vancouver, and then nobody knew what he was doing and one of the girls said, ‘Oh you look like Harry Potter.’ It made his day. [Laughs] He was so happy. It’s a very hard job on the casting department to cast somebody to play young me, when everybody knows exactly what I look like at that age, and they did I think a brilliant job.

Is there a direct through line between learning your lines as an actor to actually being a good and efficient rapper? [Laughs]

DANIEL RADCLIFFE : I don’t think so. I don’t know if the two are connected. I mean, maybe the fact that I learn lines a lot helped me learn that song. I don’t know, because I do take things in aurally, the a-u aurally… sort of, very well. I went on the Fallon show and I rapped last night… It was amazing because I said in an interview ages ago, it was one of those things like, ‘Tell us something we don’t know about you.’ And I’d done a million interviews so I’m really struggling at this point to find something you don’t know about me. So I thought, ‘Well, I know all the words to ‘Alphabet Aerobics’ by Blackalicious.’ And then Rob, who always produces me on Fallon, called me up when we were doing press for WHAT IF and was like, ‘Could you do that on the show?’ and I was like ‘I… uh… I don’t know!’ I sort of freaked out. Then when we came to do it this time, he was like, ‘The Roots really want to do it with you.’ So I was like, ‘Oh, OK!’… Then what I didn’t realize was that I did the rehearsal, then Questlove came back into the dressing room and was like, ‘Yeah man, I’m going to text those guys. They’re going to be really excited. I produced their second album.’ So I was like, ‘Oh, OK. You, like, are friends with these guys.’ So I might not have been as bold as to suggest that had I known that, but I’m amazingly glad I did it. I was, like, shaking with adrenaline for a couple of minutes afterwards. It was awesome.

FOR MORE INFO :

WEBSITE: http://radiustwc.com/releases/horns/

FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/hornsfilm

HORNS is in theaters and On-Demand now

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WAMG Talks BIG HERO 6 With TJ MILLER And DAMON WAYANS JR.

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BIG HERO 6 is getting ready to soar into theaters this Friday, and WAMG can’t wait! Recently, we sat down with TJ Miller (voice of Fred) and Damon Wayans Jr.(voice of Wasabi) in a small roundtable at Disney Animation Studios to talk about their experience working on the Disney Film, lending their comedic skills to their characters, and giraffes. Check it out below!

From Walt Disney Animation Studios, the team behind “Frozen” and “Wreck-It Ralph,” comes “Big Hero 6,” an action-packed comedy-adventure about the special bond that develops between Baymax (voice of Scott Adsit), a plus-sized inflatable robot, and prodigy Hiro Hamada (voice of Ryan Potter). When a devastating event befalls the city of San Fransokyo and catapults Hiro into the midst of danger, he turns to Baymax and his close friends adrenaline junkie Go Go Tomago (voice of Jamie Chung), neatnik Wasabi (voice of Damon Wayans Jr.), chemistry whiz Honey Lemon (voice of Genesis Rodriguez) and fanboy Fred (voice of T.J. Miller). Determined to uncover the mystery, Hiro transforms his friends into a band of high-tech heroes called “Big Hero 6.”

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What is it that said to you, I got to do this.

TJ MILLER : I would, my story is a little interesting because I haven’t told this all yet so this is an exclusive for you guys but yeah, scooping this uninteresting story. But my Voice Over Agent called me and said Disney’s doing this thing called BIG HERO 6 and it was right when I was at a point where I’ve worked sort of compulsively. I have a very strong work ethic and I was trying to pair down the stuff that I was doing so I said I can’t do it, you’ve got to tell them I can’t audition, I can’t do anything with the movie. And he was like ‘I really think you should consider doing this. It wouldn’t take a ton of time.’ ‘And I can’t. I’m sorry. I’m already doing a TV Show’ cause in my mind, I thought it was like another television show, or it was some small DVD Project or something. How wrong was I? And then he called back the next day and he said, ‘They’re really, really interested in you for the part. They really want you to do the movie and it’s gonna be like a big thing for Disney.’ And I was like ‘I can’t do it,’ and I was at my terrible girlfriend’s house at the time. ‘I can’t – I can’t step away to do this.’ And then he called back a 3rd time the next day and said, ‘Can you just record something on your iPhone?’ And I go ‘OK, fine, yes all right.’ I think I went into her weird walk in closet and recorded this thing. As I looked at it on the iPhone, I did it once or twice and I added some funny lines to it and I just sent it in and I was like ‘Fine, fine, fine.’ And you know, months later as Damon’s discussed how insanely long this process is, they said, ‘So, you’re gonna do BIG HERO 6.’ And I was like ‘Great-What is it?’ And he’s said, ‘It’s Disney’s huge tentpole movie after FROZEN.’  And I think part of it was that he wanted to make me not get nervous. I don’t really get that nervous but he just wanted me to do just the read if I could. So, I booked it off an iPhone.

DAMON WAYANS JR. : It’s just… why didn’t he lead with that?

TJ MILLER : I know. Then I would have been like, ‘I’ll fly to you now!’ Disney’s influenced all of our lives.

Did you guys audition for Baymax?

DAMON WAYANS JR. : No, I mean aside from him, I feel like our characters facilitate the comedy as far as keeping it light when needed and making the group of friends feel real, like they actually have been friends for a while. I feel like being friends with a guy like Fred is like you have to have known him for a while to maintain that friendship.

TJ MILLER : Yeah.

DAMON WAYANS JR. : And he’s kind of, not an annoying person but he’s like the guy who’s the fan of what all the other characters do but he doesn’t do any of that. He kind of just chills and goes, ‘You know what would be cool if you made like—’

TJ MILLER : And we’ve been here for a while and I think he hit it on the head in that they came and they said, you know, you’re both comedians so we want you to do a lot of the comedy in the movie. Baymax is comedic but he’s everything, and all of it. And they told me until I signed on for the movie but Fred’s kind of like you, kind of like a chill guy, who’s very excitable. And I think that’s what I love about his character is that he’s so excited for everybody in this journey. And this is like a comic book and we’ve got to do this. We should go for it. This is our Origin story, all that sort of stuff. And he’s very silly. They let me be kind of absurdist in a couple of points and sing that Fred’s Angel song that’s so bizarre. And those moments allowed me to sort of play to my idiosyncrasies but then they also trusted me and Damon to kind of do the Disney moments where we have to have some heart, you have to add some sweetness to it and you’ve got to act a little bit, which I’m not very good at but I fooled everybody.

DAMON WAYANS JR. : The animated characters have been some of my best acting work. I just put my voice but the way they animate those guys, like the certain facial expressions that I would make reacting to something – I would just be like Wow. Wasabi is a better actor than me.

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I saw that you have a tendency to kind of going off the rails sometimes. Is that you in the studio and do you get a chance to kind of riff a lot?

TJ MILLER : Totally. They were so cool about that. They sort of told us thank you for partnering with us on this, not thank you for being an employee or working on this. Disney has that feel as a company, as a studio.

DAMON WAYANS JR. : We want it to be your voice, we want it to be your comedy and do the weird stuff that you do and riff and take it in any direction. And they provide you with such a great foundation, such good writing, such good stories, such great characters so it’s easy to riff off of those whereas it’s difficult to riff off of Pete Holmes and Jeff Garlin. But it was very much that experience of a Podcast like I could go anywhere that my voice could take me in my weird strange mind. So, that’s Fred Angels and Mi Casa is French for ‘front porch.’

I have a question. I watch you in your role every week. And it was obviously, clearly, a completely different character. Do you find any similarities in Wasabi and if so, what is your favorite thing about him that you got to put yourself into?

DAMON WAYANS JR. : Similarities between me and Wasabi-we’re both a little neurotic, a little OCD. I definitely am like him in that everything should be in its place. I’ve always been like that since I was young. But aside from that I’m not like him. I’m a lot more brave than he is. I’m also not a cartoon. [LAUGHTER] But it was a great experience to kind of be that guy who’s a little more apprehensive than most in going into these dangerous situations.

In the Movie, Fred sort of jumps.

DAMON WAYANS JR. : Super jumps.

Super jumps… and I know that he’s super excited and I noticed that throughout the Movie, he would point out. I saw it almost as satire poking fun at the Super Hero genre which it’s a revenge plot and there’s a Super Villain chasing you. What makes Big Hero Six rise above your typical Superhero Movie?

TJ  MILLER : Well I think that, I am a human cartoon. I think there’s something great about that self reverential thing that Disney does so well cause in a lot of television and stuff now, there’s this cynicism to like right? What if we were actually doing this thing and Fred is kind of like “we’re actually doing this thing” because he’s so excited that this is our origin story. I read something “that was our first landing together”. He’s so excited about all this. And that’s what I think- the topics that are a little bit more difficult like revenge and loss and grief and death is balanced really well with comedy and heart that Disney can do better than anyone else. And Marvel is so great with action and superhero through line but there’s a lot of wish fulfillment in this movie. I think even as adults we think about what would be our super power and what does it take to become a hero and how do you overcome loss and there’s just a lot of themes that are dealt with here that aren’t dealt with in every comic book or superhero story and this kind of got it all. That’s like what I’m so excited about to see people go whoa- this has 50 elements to it and they’re all handled well, that are balanced out with some pretty good comedy from Damon and then some fairly mediocre stuff from me.

DAMON WAYANS JR. : I also love the idea that these characters are normal human beings and what makes them Superheroes is their minds. Hiro making all these special suits for these guys. They’re not from a Planet Farkinon or somewhere that gives them their powers.

TJ MILLER : And radiation.

DAMON WAYNES JR. : Yeah, it wasn’t a spider bite. It was just these guys and their will, and their ingenuity combined with their costumes. But I really love that. I love, it kind of being about your superhero of your mind first.

TJ MILLER : And your Super power is Tech.

DAMON WAYANS : Yeah.

TJ MILLER : And work ethic, and like you said, ingenuity. That’s something all kids can go ‘whoa, well maybe I can build a robot like Baymax or maybe I can do something to help the world.’

DAMON WAYANS JR. : Definitely planting the seed for the next Generation coming up.

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It’s interesting that they’re teams, they’re superheroes yet they all have their unique quirks as a person. What are some of your unique quirks.

TJ MILLER : I mean, I’ve been saying this a lot but I know more about Giraffes than anyone in this room. So I know an immense amount on giraffes facts.

Would you like to share a fun fact?

TJ MILLER : Yeah, their hooves are roughly the size of a Dinner Plate. They have 7 vertebrae like all mammals but they’re the tallest land mammal. The only animal that is born standing up, gestation period is 18 months. Have I made a point yet? [LAUGHS]

DAMON WAYANS JR. : How do they sleep?

TJ MILLER : Just kidding. They sleep in 10 minute giraffe naps and roughly sleep 30 minutes a day.

DAMON WAYANS JR. : Really?

TJ MILLER : Yeah, and they rarely get down. Their necks are so long that you would think that they would be able to reach a watering hole but they have to spread their legs apart, which is why they don’t drink much water, you know. They drink even less water than a camel because then they’re subject to predatory dangers. They have eyelashes and they have tear ducts but they’ve never been seen to cry.

DAMON WAYANS JR. : He doesn’t even like giraffes.

TJ MILLER : Yeah, I don’t like giraffes. That’s true. I just know everything about them.

BIG HERO 6

FOR MORE INFO : 

Website: www.Disney.com/BigHero6

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Follow us on Twitter: www.twitter.com/DisneyAnimation

BIG HERO 6 hits theaters this Friday

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Be The First To See INTERSTELLAR In St. Louis – Win Tickets And Prizepack

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Christopher Nolan’s highly anticipated INTERSTELLAR finally hits the big screen on November 7. WAMG has 4 tickets to giveaway to two lucky readers.

These are not screening passes. They are actual tickets.

When: Wednesday, November 5th

Time: 6:15PM

Where: Chesterfield Galaxy 14 Cine, 450 THF Boulevard Chesterfield, MO 63005

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One (1) Grandprize winner will receive 2 tickets and some out of this world swag:

  • Long-sleeve T-Shirt
  • Crew Patches
  • INTERSTELLAR Flash Drive
  • Mini-poster

One (1) Runnerup winner will receive 2 tickets.

To enter, add your name and email address in our comments section below.
Winners will be chosen and notified this Friday, October 31st.
No Purchase Necessary.

With our time on Earth coming to an end, a team of explorers undertakes the most important mission in human history: traveling beyond this galaxy to discover whether mankind has a future among the stars.

From acclaimed filmmaker Christopher Nolan (“The Dark Knight” films, “Inception”), INTERSTELLAR stars Oscar winner Matthew McConaughey, Oscar winner Anne Hathaway, Oscar nominee Jessica Chastain, Bill Irwin, Oscar winner Ellen Burstyn, and Oscar winner Michael Caine. The main cast also includes Wes Bentley, Casey Affleck, David Gyasi, Mackenzie Foy and Topher Grace.

Warner Bros. Pictures and Paramount Pictures present, in association with Legendary Pictures, a Syncopy/Lynda Obst Productions production, a film by Christopher Nolan, INTERSTELLAR.

See INTERSTELLAR two days early on November 5th in 70mm IMAX film, 70mm film and 35mm film. Get tickets: http://interstellar.withgoo­gle.com/tickets

https://interstellar.withgoogle.com/

INTERSTELLAR

INTERSTELLAR

Drummer Antonio Sanchez Sets The Cadence For His BIRDMAN Score

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“Rhythm is everything in cinema,” says director Alejandro G. Iñárritu.

Making the unique choice for the BIRDMAN soundtrack, Iñárritu went with an almost total drum score by four-time Grammy Award winner Antonio Sanchez.

Sanchez is considered by many critics and musicians alike to be one of the most prominent drummers, bandleaders and composers of his generation.

Sanchez will open the 2014 Hollywood Music in Media Awards with a special drum performance from BIRDMAN. Held at the Fonda Theater in Hollywood on Tuesday, November 4, Sanchez will play his critically acclaimed drum score live to a scene from the film.

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BIRDMAN or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance is a black comedy that tells the story of an actor (Michael Keaton) – famous for portraying an iconic superhero – as he struggles to mount a Broadway play. In the days leading up to opening night, he battles his ego and attempts to recover his family, his career, and himself.

Like all of Iñárritu’s films, BIRDMAN takes an acute look at the human existence as seen through the characters, anchored by Riggan (Michael Keaton), but it walks a tonal tightrope between comedy and pathos, illusion and reality, allowing for multiple interpretations.

Starring Michael Keaton, Zach Galifianakis, Edward Norton, Andrea Riseborough, Amy Ryan, Emma Stone, and Naomi Watts, BIRDMAN’s filmmaking team includes director of photography Emmanuel Lubezki, (GRAVITY), production designer Kevin Thompson (MICHAEL CLAYTON), edited by Douglas Crise (BABEL) and Stephen Mirrione (AUGUST: OSAGE COUNTY), and costume designer Albert Wolsky (REVOLUTIONARY ROAD).

Born in Mexico City, Antonio Sanchez started playing drums at the age of five and began performing professionally in his teens. Sanchez pursued a degree in classical piano at the National Conservatory in Mexico, and in 1993, he moved to Boston to enroll at Berklee College of Music and the New England Conservatory. He graduated Magna Cum Laude in Jazz Studies. Since his move to New York City in 1999 Sanchez has become one of the most sought after drummers in the international jazz scene. Sanchez is the reigning ‘Best Jazz Drummer’ on Modern Drummer’s Readers Poll’s reigning ‘Best Jazz Drummer’.

He has been the drummer of choice for twenty-time Grammy winner Pat Metheny and has been part of virtually every project the famed guitarist has put together since 2000. They’ve recorded eight albums together, and three of them have been awarded the Grammy. The Pat Metheny Unity Group is presently touring Japan, China, Australia and Singapore and will wrap up in New York in early December.

WAMG caught up with the percussionist, via the phone, in Shanghai as he was preparing to make his way to Australia for the next part of the tour with Metheny.

During our discussion, Sanchez explained his collaboration with Iñárritu on BIRDMAN and how the rhythm of the drums is tethered to Riggan’s journey towards self-discovery.

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WAMG: Your score is amazing and the film is brilliant.

Antonio Sanchez: Oh thanks. I still can’t wait to see the film.

WAMG: The viewer follows Riggan and Birdman. Iñárritu has said, “Birdman is Riggan’s super ego, and from Birdman’s perspective, Riggan has lost his mind by doing this play that is clearly beneath them. From Riggan’s perspective, it’s Birdman that has lost his mind. From the perspective of the era, both are irrelevant.”

Your drum score is woven throughout the film. How much of it did you compose prior to shooting?

AS: When Alejandro first contacted me in January of last year, he sent me the script right away and I read it. It would be the equivalent if I sent somebody charts of music that hasn’t been finished. I’m not a film director seeing it already done, so it was like a completely different experience. When I read the script, it was a great script, but I needed a little more information.

Alejandro started talking to me, telling me about the characters, giving more information about the backstory. What we did is when they started shooting the film in New York, we got together in the studio and did a bunch of demos. My first instinct was to compose rhythmic themes for each character so every time you see Riggan come on the screen, you hear a certain beat or vibe.

When I showed that to Alejandro, he said that’s exactly what he didn’t want. “I want something completely spontaneous,” he said. “Very improvised. You’re a Jazz drummer, so I want you to do your thing.”

When we got together in the studio again he would explain the scene. “Riggan is in his dressing room and he gets up and his mind is boiling already. He opens the door to his dressing room and starts walking down this long hallway. He then turns the corner and he’s having all these crazy thoughts and goes to the stagedoor and waits there for a second. He opens the stagedoor and he goes on the stage. How would you play?”

I was thinking, okay, I’ll figure something out. But I told him I wanted him to sit in front of me while I’m playing and to raise his hand every time he sees Riggan doing something. Imagine the whole scene and every time I see your hand, that means he’s going onto the next part of the scene. So I would change what I played according to that and that’s what we did for a bunch of scenes. This way he could get the timing in his mind.

Once we did that, we took it and put it to the film.

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WAMG: Was the film edited to your drum score or vice versa?

AS: It was a little bit of back and forth. They spliced up what I had done and they edited onto the film once it was in a rough cut shape. I then came to Los Angeles, saw and heard what they did. We got another studio in Los Angeles and I did another whole pass of more or less the same thing that I had done, but now looking at the movie as I was drumming. Alejandro was there giving me a lot of pointers. For instance, “when Riggan says this word, stop playing,” he would say.

I’ve been improvising my whole life, but I’ve never really had to do it to an image – especially a moving image. It was very interesting. Getting into Alejandro’s head and seeing how his mind works was fascinating.

WAMG: The rhythm of the drums is the movie’s heart, despite what’s going on with Michael Keaton’s character.

AS: Yes, that’s exactly Alejandro first told me when he contacted me. “I want the whole thing to be about the drums and the rhythm and Riggan’s unhealthy mind,” he said. “I want you to show that with the drums.”

Another really cool thing that we did was to overdub a bunch of drum tracks, especially towards the end when Riggan starts getting really bad. We did a lot of music and put it together so it sounds really chaotic and horrifying in a way.

WAMG: There’s a cacophony of brushes and sticks and snares throughout.  For percussionists reading, what did you use?

AS: I brought the whole kit and caboodle for this. I used a lot of different cymbals, as well as various different drum sizes.  I played with sticks, mallets and rods. I used my hands.

Another thing we did was to give the drums a gritty, dirty sound. When we did those first tracks in New York, the drums sounded really clean.  Since the film takes place around this Broadway theatre, Alejandro wanted it to sound dirty and gritty. I had to prepare the drums with different drum heads so they would sound old. I detuned them so they would sound flappy, so when I hit them, it would sound like they hadn’t been played in years.

WAMG: There are also some interesting classical pieces, along with the songs, that are mixed in with your score. It’s a nice ebb and flow between the two. Were you in on that?

AS: Alejandro told me both would be in there. The soundtrack CD was released not too long ago and the whole thing is just drums and classical music.  I don’t think there’s ever been a record like that ever in the history of soundtracks.

I was listening to it from end to end and it’s really interesting how it flows.

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WAMG: Your tracks reminded me of John Bonham, Art Blakey, and Buddy Rich.  Who influenced you and who are your favorite drummers?

AS: You mentioned some of my main guys. Those were a big influence on me growing up. Ringo Starr was my first influence as was Charlie Watts from the Rolling Stones. I was a rocker at heart as a kid.

I started playing along to the records of The Police. I love The Police – especially Stewart Copeland. Rush’s Neil Peart – he was also one of my guys.

Then I started getting more into Jazz. Tony Williams, Max Roach, Art Blakey, Buddy Rich, Elvin Jones, Roy Haynes. You have to listen to everything.  I came more through the backdoor into Jazz because I started Rock first. I have a pretty wide variety of things that I can do as a drummer.  I’ve listened to so many other types of music – besides drums and played it too – in Mexico and in The States. It was very useful to have all those tools when we started working on the film.

WAMG: Do you hope to work on more film scores in the future?

AS: This was my first soundtrack. It was not my on my radar to do a film score at all.  Alejandro just happened to want to do this and I was very into the idea.  If another score happens in one shape or form, that’ll be great but I have my other career as a band leader and musician. Right now I’m in Shanghai doing this Asian tour and were going onto Australia. Next year I’m putting out my own solo records and working a lot with my band.  If in the midst of it all, another film score happens, that’d be great.

The BIRDMAN soundtrack is available now on Milan Records: https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/birdman-original-motion-picture/id922241290 and HERE.

From Fox Searchlight Pictures, BIRDMAN is in select theaters now. Nationwide this Friday, October 24th.

WAMG Talks To JAKE GYLLENHAAL: NIGHTCRAWLER

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Open Road Films latest release NIGHTCRAWLER is already getting a lot of attention for the amazing performance given by leading man Jake Gyllenhaal… and the film doesn’t open until next Friday!

Read Michael Haffner’s Fantastic Fest review HERE.

Last week WAMG sat down with Gyllenhaal (in a small roundtable) to discuss the film. Check it out below.

NIGHTCRAWLER is a pulse-pounding thriller set in the nocturnal underbelly of contemporary Los Angeles. Jake Gyllenhaal stars as Lou Bloom, a driven young man desperate for work who discovers the high-speed world of L.A. crime journalism. Finding a group of freelance camera crews who film crashes, fires, murder and other mayhem, Lou muscles into the cut-throat, dangerous realm of nightcrawling — where each police siren wail equals a possible windfall and victims are converted into dollars and cents. Aided by Rene Russo as Nina, a veteran of the blood-sport that is local TV news, Lou blurs the line between observer and participant to become the star of his own story.

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One of the good things she was just saying about you is that you would make a great director. Do you have any ambitions do to that, at some point?

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : Well, my father’s a director. My mother’s a director, too. I know from a certain amount of experience, from watching a lot of people do it, who are extraordinary at it, because I’ve had the opportunity to work with people who are really good at it, that it would be presumptious of me to say that I would be good at it. At a time when I am looking to be presumptious, then maybe, yeah. I don’t know if that’s now. But I would like to try my hand at it, at some time.

I was going to ask you, when it came together to piecing together Lewis, did you do some research in the way motivational speakers talk and position themselves? Because I saw some of the hand movements that you were doing for your character.

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : Yeah, well, the hand gesturing, all that weird gesticulation… It was a bit of… You’ve met Dan Gilroy? And I talked a lot about there’s somebody who I based a lot of the character on, who used his hands a lot. But Dan, when he talks, he stands really straight, and he’s very thin. There’s something about him, he uses his hands a lot. So no, I didn’t study anybody who does self-help. The words kind of guided me there. Because there’s these strange punctuations, about it, and I kind of followed to a t the punctuation. I did not veer off one word, or one period, or any commas, throughout the whole thing. I think, in that way, it needed me to be very specific. So if there was a period, I would make sure to say a period. Sometimes my hands did it for me.

What about that movement that you would do with your hair? I noticed that was a kind of transformative movement. Is that something you decided, reading the script, or is that something you decided, “I like that!”.

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : That just happened one day. There was one point when I had the idea with Dan. There was some point where I thought, “What if, when Luke is headed into filming, that his hair gets in his way?” Because my hair was pretty long at the time. And there was a moment in the movie, when the hair was all in my face, and I’m filming, and I just thought, so often, when you’re driving, it’s sort of more dangerous when you’re driving with your knee. So there were a lot of inspirations that were coming from all over the place, from this movie. So I said to Dan, “Wouldn’t it be great when I was talking to Rick in the car, while I’m giving him speeches, that as I’m talking, as we all do, when you’ve lived in L.A., or driven a car in L.A., I’ll drive with my knee while I’m putting my hair up.” Yeah, exactly! There’s something about it, where I thought he was a ninja, that he thought that he was a ninja. It’s like, before he did anything, where he stole that bike, he’s a ninja! He went in, and was like, “Let’s go!” That just came out. Dan loved it.

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In building this character, at times it seemed like this is Norman Bates, who’s gone into TV movies. Is he a sociopath? Is that why, with this character, do you think there was that, to him?

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : My belief is, in using that word, I think it takes the onus off of us, in the creation of Lou. He’s our creation. Without our need for information, without our need for information of all sorts, in a world where unimportant information is now important, and important information is now unimportant, and it all exists on the same plane, we just need to feed and consume, in that way. That people like Lou can thrive. He’s a product of a generation where jobs are, I wouldn’t necessarily say, now, as scarce as they have been, but definitely scarce, and they are transforming the idea of what someone does, as so different. The other day, I wrote an article and I post, it’s like, there’s a job that is changing the idea of a whole generation, who are coming into the world going, “What is a job? What do I do? How do I get a job?” And Lou is a product of that. The choices he makes; he’s kind of a walking metaphor, that’s how I look at it. So I wouldn’t say, as soon as you say, “Oh, he’s a sociopath.” It just sort of makes it go, “Oh, he’s over there. Don’t worry. We don’t have to deal with it.” In a way, I think he’s a product of… he does what he does. He is enabled by Nina, Renee’s character. He’s enabled by the guys at the head of the station, and they are enabled by us. There’s a world where we maybe could live, ideally, where someone who wouldn’t end up being the head of a huge major network. But I feel like, in the world that we live in now, he probably would.

Following up with questions, this movie is kind of about two people going to the TV, and what they’re doing. How do you see the journalism, and the entertainment, as kind of so close, and journalism has changed. The journalism…

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : There’s sort of part of the same answer that I would give, the same thing that I just said. I think the difference between what Lou does, he’s dealing with life and death. Though I think that there is a sense of no one taking responsibility. We’re all just in it. We’re all just needing information, and getting it. I think whatever shocks us is what we’re bound to go towards, even if we don’t want to. We’re still terrified by it, and interested. It’s the same idea as moving past an accident.

It’s kind of understandable. The teams he’s following, and the people…

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : I think that idea is very different. When you’re talking about celebrity culture, you’re dealing with life and death. When you’re following somebody who’s going about living their life, it’s not comparable.

Can you talk a little bit about working with Rene? As a person, and as an actress, and as your partner in this? And her touching your knee?

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : Oh yeah, she did do that in one scene. Well, in the restaurant scene, that’s actually a perfect example. Her husband, Dan, gave her very little to survive with in that scene. I would say that I was given, Lou was given a figurative 50 calibre machine gun, with his words, and she’s given a spoon. So I walked into that scene, expecting to just win, just because I’d been given all those words. And eventually he does win that scene. But Renee came in, and made it a struggle for me, in that, even with close to nothing to defend with, she was like a fierce competitor. The choices that she was making, moment to moment, even when she touched my leg, she must have said that to you, that was a choice she was doing, under the table to me, that no one would see, to mess with me. Because she knew that she needed to try and win something. As actor to actor. And I love it! There’s nothing I love more than another actor who is going to sideswipe me, sweep my leg, because I mean, it’s fun! She does it in so much fun, so much play, it’s not like dangerous. It’s so playful. When we rehearsed, with her and Dan; they’re so loving, the two of them, just so positive and loving. I would come and rehearse and do a speech with her, a scene, and she’d be like, “Oh my God, you’re just so great!” And then I’d be like, “Can we just do the scene?” And she’d be like, “Nope, I mean, Danny, isn’t he just so wonderful?” I’d just be like, and he would go, “I know, I told you! I told you!” Guys, we’re doing a scene! It was like that with them, and particularly with her. She’s been very, she’s separated herself from the whole Hollywood thing, as much as she can, and she’s really creative, and very sensitive, and very loving and open. When you think about her in ‘The Thomas Crown Affair’ and stuff, there’s a real intimidation factor about her beauty, and her charisma and stuff, but I think, deep down inside, she just likes to garden, and chill out and stuff. I love that side of her, in the scene, because it’s that side of her, seeing the real human side of her, that makes her so fearless in that scene. So it was great fun to work with her.

Can you talk about the look on your face, because it looks like…? Is it some effort on the make-up person, or is it just the camera?

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : Can we talk about your face? [Laughs] Who did that?

Is that the first time you lost some weight?

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : I have an extraordinary make-up artist, who’s working with me on this movie ‘Prisoners’, right now. And then he came, and he was nice enough to come and work with me on this movie. We had extraordinary department heads; from Rob Elswit, who shot our movie, all the way to our production designer. Every single department head, it was nuts! It was a 7.5 million dollar movie! The fact that we had all these people working with us was insane. So Donald, who did my make-up, I also worked on character with him. It was very important. It’s not about anything other than the creation of a good feeling inside. There’s no continuity with how we worked. There’s emotional continuity, given the scenario, and the scene and the day and the moment, has nothing to do with anything besides that. He was helpful there. We did subtle things. We made subtle choices and stuff. One of the biggest things that Lou really only sweats once in the movie, and that was a very particular thing, that we talked about often. In the times when he’s giving his speeches, or when he’s talking to Riz, or when he’s under pressure, when he’s with the police officers, when they’re questioning him, he’s in the interrogation room, he does not sweat. The only time that he sweats is out of excitement, when he’s going through that house. When he comes out of that, and he runs down that hill, and he’s driving away, is the only time that you see him sweaty. Because he’s fucking psyched! Every other exchange, there’s this cool confidence to him. So those types of things, as far as my face, and the choices that are made, losing weight and stuff. That was just months of, as we were getting into shooting, I would do stuff like run to set, and at a certain point I was just running through Griffith Park all the time, eight to fifteen miles a day, and I was just training myself as a coyote, with all the coyotes and stuff. And then my face just changed, I think. I don’t think I was really even aware, until a few months ago, and we were going through all the cuts. You start to separate from all the characters, and go like “Wow!” The place where you are mentally, it has so much less to do mentally than it does, physically. I can go back there at any moment and remember. I can go back to that Chinese restaurant, Like the scene of an accident, or something.

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The way things are, like it or not, when the film comes out, you will be asked to make an indictment against this business, and how we cover stories, and how we put out information.

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : Just like you get to make an indictment of us, and what we put out.

Are you comfortable being put in that position? Have you thought about what you will say, or how you feel about that? Obviously, it’s a work of fiction, but is there reality in there, and do you define it as okay? I’m just thinking of this question as I’m saying it, but I can see it now, on CNN, or one of those shows, assuming we stop getting ebola, and say, shooting each other? Is there possibly some conversation on that?

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : Well, my form of communication is through the movies that I make. That’s one thing that I can say. I consider that to be, as much as I consider that to be entertainment, and it should be entertaining, that’s why I think, this movie is actually really fun to watch, and entertaining, as well as I feel like it’s some kind of commentary. I feel like when you can get the two in a movie, I feel like those are the types of movies I want to make. I believe that movies are political, no matter what. I think that if you’re going to escape, or you’re going to overtly deal with something political, it’s still political, because there’s stuff going on all the time. And I think I was taught and raised that it’s important to know, to be informed, and to make choices based on that, from a number of different standpoints, not just one. So I don’t think it’s necessarily, I don’t think any story’s good unless there’s a bit of indictment somewhere. There’s a… unless there’s some kind of comment; I would say indictment is the wrong word, I would say commentary. Dan Gilroy has a point of view. And I think he’s created this character, as i’ve said before, to shine light on the fact that I don’t think a character like Lou could exist, unless we really created him. There have been people who have seen the movie, and have come up to me, who do work in the media, and said stuff like, “I would buy the footage that Lou…” I’m like, “Wow! That’s interesting to me. That’s fascinating,” but at the same time, it’s true. You can go anywhere, on any news site, and scroll down, like you even said, we don’t want to read half of the things that we have to read. And I’m sure you don’t want to cover it. But it’s important that people know it. I have been more moved by the media, emotionally, my heart has swelled, as a result of stories that I’ve read, and I’ve been disgusted at the same time, in different stories that I’ve read. And I think that’s what’s beautiful about the job that you all do. That we’re all part of it. I feel the same way about movies. There are movies that do the same thing to me.

In the movie, L.A. is kind of its own character, and it’s beautiful. Can you tell me how you describe L.A., and how that played into your character?

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : L.A. is where I was born, and where I was raised. So it’s filled with all of that stuff for me, my childhood and stuff, driving around L.A… it means that, everytime I’m here, I live in New York, now, I flew here just a few hours ago. Every time that I fly in, it’s… I love L.A. I don’t want to quote Randy Newman, but… The movie would not have been able to been made, anywhere else. This is a Los Angeles movie. It’s a movie about the world, and I think that L.A., from my experience of L.A. has every single culture in it. I mean, it’s just this extraordinarily vast melting pot. And also the topography of it is really important, because there’s also the desert outside, and there’s the city, the metropolis. And Dan and I talked a lot about this, that the borders from space of Los Angeles, it goes from like electric to total darkness, into the desert. You know, there’s the green grass, and the lawns we created, are all man-made, and outside of that, is wilderness and the animal kingdom, and the wild. They come in, these animals come in at night. Who, who lives in L.A., has not had an exchange with a coyote? You know what I mean? Anytime that I talk to somebody who’s seen the movie, and said that I based this character off of a coyote, they go, “Oh!” Because it’s like, who hasn’t been eyefucked by a coyote. You know? They are not intimidated by you at all? In fact, they’re looking for the most vulnerable aspect of you. And they’re a beautiful animal. I have grown to love them, because I’ve done so much research, and felt like I was one of them, while I was playing this character. But they are ruthless, you know? And because they are also starving.

Are you living in New York because you’re living there, or are you living there because it’s a cool city?

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : I live in New York because my family lives there. My nieces live there, my mother lives there. My family all lives in New York. And my family is more important to me than where I live, but they all happen to be there, but it happens to be a wonderful city, too.

Are you excited about Broadway?

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : Am I excited about Broadway? I’m so excited, I can’t wait! I did a show about a year and a half ago, with the same writer and director, on a different show. It’s my favorite place to be, is up on stage. Like every musician gets to go on tour, you know what i mean? In my acting, the movie is my album. The theater is the live show, and so I can’t wait. That’s a different animal! That’s the animal, I always want to come out and they say, “Cut!”

What’s the name of your play?

JAKE GYLLENHAAL : It’s called ‘Constellations’ by Nick Payne.

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NIGHTCRAWLER opens in theaters OCTOBER 31

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Composer Steven Price Talks The Sounds, Themes And Heart Of FURY

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Director David Ayer’s gripping World War 2 film, FURY, is now in cinemas and took in $23.5M at the box office to claim the #1 spot this weekend.

Over the course of 24 fateful hours, five men of the Sherman Tank “Fury” – Wardaddy, the commander; Boyd Swan, the gunner; Grady Travis, the loader; Trini Garcia, the driver; and Norman, the assistant driver – take on 300 enemy German troops in a desperate battle for survival. Ayer’s movie resonates with common themes of brotherly love, friendship, and trust.

The closing night film at the BFI London Film Festival, Sony Pictures’ FURY stars Brad Pitt, Shia LaBeouf, Logan Lerman, Michael Peña, Jon Bernthal, Jason Isaacs, and Scott Eastwood. FURY opens in UK cinemas on October 22.

The creative behind the scenes artists are cinematographer Roman Vasyanov,  production designer Andrew Menzies, film editors Dody Dorn, ACE and Jay Cassidy, ACE, costume designer Owen Thornton, and composer Steven Price.

Price’s haunting score is filled with machine-like sounds, Germanic chants and intimate themes. Last year, I spoke with the Academy Award winning composer prior to the release of Edgar Wright’s AT WORLD’S END and Alfonso Cuaron’s GRAVITY.

Just as Price did on his Oscar-winning score for GRAVITY, where the sounds of radio waves were incorporated into the score, Price was able to find a distinctive voice for the music of FURY by using unusual and unconventional instruments in a fusion with the orchestral, choral and solo writing featured throughout.

Having not slowed down since his Oscar win six months ago, WAMG recently discussed with Steven Price his work on FURY, collaborating with David Ayer and a trip to Downing Street.

WAMG: The last time we spoke at The Academy’s “Oscar Concert” you were Steven Price… composer.  Now you’re Academy Award winner Steven Price.

I hope AMPAS continues every year with that concert.

Steven Price: That was one of the great memories for me from the week.

86th Academy Awards, The Oscar Concert

WAMG: Now you have FURY. I have to tell you, for those of us whose grandfathers served in WWII…

SP: I’m one of them too.

WAMG: It’s very personal. It’s very emotional.

SP: Absolutely! Certainly made me wish I had the presence of mind when they were around to ask them some questions. No one in my family ever discussed it.

WAMG: My grandfather was a survivor of a ship that was sunk in the English Channel on Christmas Eve 1944, recovered, and then kept trudging along up to Battle of the Bulge.

SP: You can only imagine what they must have gone through. It was never discussed for the next 30 years, as in my granddad’s case. Definitely makes you think.

WAMG: From the first note of the score, you don’t pull any punches. Did you read the script beforehand?

SP: Once again, I was involved quite early on. I got some of the script when they just started shooting. It turned out they were filming 40 minutes away from where I live, so I was on set a couple of times. I was able to watch a couple of scenes being shot and spent a bit of time with David Ayer. We were discussing it in October of last year which gave me lots of time to do research and working out how I was going to help tell David’s story with the score.

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WAMG: What did you think of the set and location where David Ayer was shooting?

SP: It was remarkable. The first time I went, they were doing long shots on the first big battle of the film. Basically what you see in the film is what I drove into. Huge, big tanks with the troops lined up behind them – it was like entering a war zone. The explosions were real. No CGI. It was a very weird thing I drove into.

You got a sense at what David was going for – a real authenticity. When I met the man himself, you got the sense of this being a very honest look at a very dark time in the War. He told me, as he was hitting his stomach, “I want to feel, I want to feel.” That was the agreement we had, music-wise, to help take you on that kind of journey. It was clear from the start that it was going to be quite an emotional score to do.

WAMG: World War II Soldiers were in the rain, mud, and sleep-deprived. 1940’s War Movies were almost too clean, too sanitized. FURY is definitely not.

SP: It’s really very brutal and visceral in many ways. Every now and then I would see a scene and think, “was that real – that guy getting run over by a tank?” Ayer’s research on the photography of the time was incredible. He’s kind of a huge expert on military history of that time anyway, so there’s nothing there that’s gratuitous really. FURY is a small window on how horrible it was. It was hell basically.

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In the film, the American tank column faces their most deadly threat: a German Tiger tank – ultimate tank of war. A Sherman really stood very little chance against a Tiger – it’s set up as a formidable weapon.

On this film, Price had access to recordings made on the set, and later, weapons, and parts of the tank itself were called back into duty as percussion equipment in the studio.

WAMG: You can hear a lot of different elements with your score, including the tanks, the metal and even the dogtags.

SP:  One of the crucial ideas behind the score was this was a war of mass mechanization where everyone was building these machines to kill. You were there to kill your opponents before they killed you with these tanks. Within those tanks were the humans trudging forward and the guys in Fury who had been working together and living together for 3 or 4 years, were exhausted and broken down. It was a way of finding music that encompassed all of that.

The music constantly grinds forward.  There’s metallic, grinding noises and some were derived from actual source recordings off the tanks themselves.

Then you’ve got the choir which is constantly chanting in German. The idea being there, whilst three weeks away from the end of the War, you assume for the Allies, victory was in sight, when actually they were surrounded in Nazi Germany. They were totally unsafe every single moment. The choir is the embodiment of evil – chanting sometimes far away, sometimes close whispering – with the constant unsettling presence.

The orchestra is carrying more emotional ideas, more character themes. All of those ideas to give the sense of the hell they’re in, in the midst of exhaustion and constant motion.

WAMG: The echoes of that Germanic chanting are chilling. When did you decide to utilize that effective theme?

SP: That was quite early on. One of the cues halfway through the film, one where they’re travelling in the tanks to the next horrible thing, I wanted this sense of threat and exhaustion. I fell upon the idea of this inhuman chanting, followed by the idea that it could be this German chanting where they’re constantly singing and reciting extracts from the Lutheran Bible. It has lots of references to invasion and the pain of war, so it felt kind of timeless and accurate to what we were doing.

Really until we got to the recording session for it, I wasn’t totally sure it was going to work. But I got it all set up in the studio with big charts and all of these phrases that I had selected and literally going through it cue by cue. With each scene, for this one we’re going to use this bit, and we did this through the whole thing. There are no emotions in their voices – it was meant to sound like this machine.

The first moment that we did it, there was a shiver in the control room. It felt very unnerving. It became a feature of the score from then on.

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WAMG: You added some beautiful piano solos in two tracks – “Wardaddy” and particularly my favorite “Norman”.

SP: That was one of the earlier themes I wrote.

WAMG: Both just about bring you to tears. These themes and their relationship are the soul of the film. Both tracks are so pure.

SP: A lot of the work on the film was their relationship and introducing them at the very start. We don’t know Wardaddy – he’s very cold and abstract.  As we see more aspects of him, that develops. When we first meet Norman, his theme is this skittish kind of thing. He’s very unsettled. His eyes are flickering around all over the place. He’s landed in this place he never expected to be. It’s only later in the film that he develops more of a sense of where he is and it’s there that his theme evolves.

Brad Pitt;Logan Lerman

WAMG: FURY is the closing night selection at the BFI Film Festival.  Plus you’ll be making a special trip.

SP: My wife and I are off to Downing Street, which is something I never thought I’d say, for an Academy Event to initiate the new members. It’ll be a bit weird being in the home of British government.

WAMG: What was Oscar week like for you both?

SP: It was a totally surreal experience. It’s a lot longer than what you see at home. We were told at the start, it would be two and a half hours before they call your category. As the time went on, it became more surreal and after two hours into it, it became more amusing. I’ve seen the clip when the announcement is made and I’m still not totally convinced it’s me. I have very little recollection of it.

WAMG: And then they swoop you back stage.

SP: The room for the photos was the most blinding room I’ve ever been in.  The whole thing was such a wonderful experience and a very fun night.

The FURY original motion picture soundtrack is available now from Varese Sarabande Records: https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/fury-original-motion-picture/id922668968

86th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre on March 2, 2014 in Hollywood, CA.
86th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre on March 2, 2014 in Hollywood, CA.

Listen to the soundtrack on Spotify.

WAMG Talks THE BEST OF ME With Nicholas Sparks : Exclusive Interview

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It’s fall, love is in the air, the leaves are changing color, and Relativity’s new love story THE BEST OF ME hits theaters this Friday. We know you love a good love story, so recently I attended a press day for the film in Los Angeles for the film where I sat down with writer / producer Nicholas Sparks for an exclusive interview. Check it out below!

Based on the bestselling novel by acclaimed author Nicholas Sparks, THE BEST OF ME tells the story of Dawson and Amanda, two former high school sweethearts who find themselves reunited after 20 years apart, when they return to their small town for the funeral of the beloved friend. Their bittersweet reunion reignites the love they’ve never forgotten, but soon they discover the forces that drove them apart twenty years ago live on, posing even more serious threats today. Spanning decades, this epic love story captures the enduring power of our first true love, and the wrenching choices we face when confronted with elusive second chances.

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What do you think it is about you that makes you able to look beyond the tragedy and find the good in your writing, or even in life? 

NICHOLAS SPARKS : Well, I think it comes from a little bit of my world view… in that tragedy isn’t the end of the world. I started my career with the idea that all great love stories, by definition, have to end in tragedy because at one point or another one of them dies. It doesn’t matter if you’re talking about the love of your life, or your parents, or your siblings, or your friends, or your pet. Great loves, by definition… it has to end in tragedy, so it’s inevitable. That doesn’t mean that you can’t find joy in life. Even if you know it’s going to end tragically, that doesn’t mean that you have to have a tragic life. You enjoy love, and the moments that it’s in your life because it provides you with everything you live for.

It seems like a prop in the background of all of your stories are letters, regardless of the timeframe. Are you hoping to preserve the art form, or is it strictly for the romanticism?

NICHOLAS SPARKS : Both. Yeah, you know, I still write letters. I still hand write letters, and I still receive hand written letters. So, it’s still out there, and I think it’s a wonderful… As far as a novel goes it’s a wonderful way to – perhaps if you’r writing a third person novel – to shift into first person for a little bit to provide additional depth and emotion for that particular character. I also admire the craft of writing a good letter. When people reach out to me because they are struggling, for whatever reason, my first instinct is ‘Ok. I shall write them a letter.’ as opposed to necessarily sending flowers, or something. I do that as well, but my first instinct is to write a letter because there is something beautiful in the written word if it’s done in a meaningful, authentic way. It’s sad to me that people don’t do it as much, but there are those that do, and those that do find great meaning in it whether they are writing them or receiving them.

The Best Of Me

Building off of that, we’re living in a time where social media is all over the place, and people are living through their phones. How do you balance bringing your films up to date with keeping the nostalgia?

NICHOLAS SPARKS : Well, I think technology changes. Technology obviously changes but the emotions don’t. For me, I don’t necessarily focus in on any sort of technology. I don’t think it’s necessarily intrinsic to the stories that I’m wanting to write. Emotion changes so incredibly slowly. If you were in love in 1950, or falling in love in 1950 it felt the same as falling in love today. You can go watch CASABLANCA, right? They write this film, and it’s this deep ache… You could see the depth of love they had for each other. That doesn’t change. It just doesn’t change. So, whether they have cell phones, or look up something on the computer rather than a novel… the emotional connection comes from one-on-one interaction.

The internet was buzzing last week about a statistic released by the U.S. government. According to their tracking, this is the first time that there are more single adults than married. I’m just curious if you think that this, or factors relating to it will, in any way, affect your writing in the future.

NICHOLAS SPARKS : Not necessarily. I don’t think it will. It’s certainly known that there are challenges for people who are single that may not have been married.

What do you think makes a love story that appeals to a broad audience?

NICHOLAS SPARKS : It’s something that I keep in mind as I’m writing. I have tried to vary everything in the novels with the exception that if they take place in North Carolina, there may be a love story, and it’s probably going to be in a small town. Everything else is different, from the theme, the ages of the characters, the dilemma… In my most recent novel they were Jewish, and they were ninety years old, and I did A WALK TO REMEMBER. They were teenagers. I did THE NOTEBOOK. Well, he way eighty! He was also 28, or something like that. I’ve done characters in their early fifties, or their late forties. I do try to vary it to bring in, I guess the concept that love is possible at any age, and that when it’s right it’s right. I think that’s timeless at twelve or timeless at eighty.

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THE BEST OF ME opens in theaters everywhere this Friday, October 17th

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WAMG Talks To AUTOMATA Director Gabe Ibáñez

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AUTOMATA begins with foreshadowing text:

Millions of robots witness the decay of the human civilization.

Millions of robots ruled by two security protocols:

First protocol: prevents the robot from harming any form of
life.

Second protocol: prevents the robot from altering itself or other robots.

This thought provoking science-fiction film tells the story of an insurance agent of ROC robotics corporation who routinely investigates the case of manipulating a robot. What he discovers will have profound consequences for the future of humanity.

The film stars Antonio Banderas, Birgitte Hjort Sørensen, Melanie Griffith, Dylan McDermott and Robert Forster.

Read Travis Keune’s review HERE.

For fans of the genre, I can’t emphasize enough how much you need to see this stunning film.

In September I spoke with AUTOMATA’s writer/director Gabe Ibáñez. Like Stanley Kubrick, he has a profound understanding of the genre.

For Ibáñez, his own fascination about the theory of technological singularity, and inspired by reading Asimov’s robot novels, compelled him to bring a fresh perspective to life for audiences – one that questioned the very meaning of human existence and our place in evolution.

Ibáñez ‘s work on AUTOMATA reflects an accomplished filmmaker with an authentic style and the ability to capture visually striking and atmospheric imagery. His signature is a mix of technical craftsmanship, imagery and dramatic precision.

In our spoiler-filled conversation, the director spoke on how he wanted to provide the viewer a glimpse of what it might be like if humans found life in machines one day.

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WAMG: Your movie is so vivid and emotional on so many levels. It’s great science-fiction.

Gabe Ibáñez: Oh thank you. It’s nice to hear that.

WAMG: In AUTOMATA, you explore sympathy the robots carry within them and the moral fiber people have lost along the way. The humans are more robotic and the robots more humane.

GI: That’s interesting. The movie gives the robots a moral sense like in classic science fiction books. I love these kind of robots. In our film, the robots have taken on human traits. On the other hand, you have this man, the protagonist, living in a futuristic world where violence is from the humans against other humans, against the robots, and against the environment, so for me it was a very important conflict. I love the science fiction movies from the 1960’s where there were big philosophical themes and conflicts within the story. We tried to do the same with AUTOMATA.

WAMG: The way artificial intelligence is illustrated in your movie feels very realistic and one possible future.

GI:  We tried to make it realistic with the elements of the film. We read news articles about robots and machines who were able to repair themselves. For me it was a very real idea. For it to be realistic was very important, so much so that in the end we decided to create real robots. They are not CGI in the movie.

They were all around the set and the actors were able to interact with them. It was practical to have them there at all times and very important in the end. It was easier for them to work with the actors in all the scenes. In real life, these robots were handled by specialists on set who worked together to tend to the make and design of each model.

In the film, the robots of course are very interesting, spectacular things. But in the end, this movie is about that moment when man left the tree, began working with fire and inventing the wheel, but this time, man is the ape who stayed in the tree, who has fear about fire, and who does not understand how a wheel works.

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WAMG: Your film crew did such an amazing job – the score is beautiful and integral to the movie. How did you choose composer Zacarías M. de la Riva.?

GI:  I worked with him on my first movie, HIERRO. I’m so glad you liked the music. He’s a great composer. With AUTOMATA’s score, we followed the same track as the classic science fiction films of the 60’s, where the music has a very important role. Like in THE PLANET OF THE APES, the music isn’t in the background – it is right in front of you. It’s there to tell the story. Zacarías did that with his score and we’re very happy with the work his did for this movie.

WAMG: The script is very smart and profound. The intimate conversation between the “First one” and  Jacq toward the end of the movie is a touching moment. How long did you work on those emotional elements?

GI: It’s my first script. I wrote the first version in about six months with my writing partners Igor Legarreta and Javier Sánchez Donate. Then we contacted Antonio (Banderas). He then came on the movie as producer. We worked on the final version for about three or four years.

It was a very unique idea in a world you don’t often see. You see a lot of post-apocalyptic films, but rarely do you see sort of this pre-apocalyptic environment where everything is degenerating into chaos.

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Another thing striking about AUTOMATA is the continuity to the theory of evolution in the only female robot, Cleo, who begins to develop a consciousness and curiosity that goes against the android’s second protocol. To underscore Cleo’s human quality, makeup artist Elena Zhekova explained it was important the lead robot have expression and a real sense of life despite being a machine. Even her eyes were meticulously matched to help build up to the emotional connection as the story unfolds.

Q I loved seeing Melanie Griffith in the film. Who decided that she provide the voice of Cleo?

GI: I decided after Antonio proposed the idea. After he read the script, he asked what I thought about having Melanie do the voice of Cleo.  I thought it was a great and unique opportunity, not only to have her in the movie, but as the voice of the robot. She agreed once we asked her. Her human role is a small part, but the robot character is very important. It was very kind of Melanie to do it.

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WAMG: Where on earth was the movie shot – it’s very desolate.

GI: We found several locations in Bulgaria, specifically near Sofia, to shoot the film. Everything is very green. But there are so many desert scenes throughout the movie, so we used CGI for those parts and those parts only. There were many locations Bulgaria offered up including a number of places with mines. When we were not shooting outside, we also used Boyana Film Studio to balance every shot in spite of the unpredictable weather that came with shooting in the spring.

WAMG: In Stanley Kubrick’s 2001 A SPACE ODYSSEY, as the HAL-9000 computer is being deactivated, the final thing it says, or sings, is the “Daisy Bell (Bicycle Built for Two)” song.

Did you intentionally add that song at the end of the credits as a homage to 2001 A SPACE ODYSSEY?

GI:  Yes. It’s not only for that movie, but the reason Kubrick used this song in his movie was because it was the first song the computer sang. IBM’s first computer (IBM 7094) played the Daisy song when it was first created. (Video)

WAMG: It’s a brilliant touch!

GI: (laughs) You’re the first person who noticed that. I’m very happy to hear that. It’s something we put there for a reason to make the connection.

WAMG: Thanks to Gabe Ibáñez for taking the time to talk to us!

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The film is rated R for violence, language and some sexual content.

The Behind-the-Scenes artists include ALEJANDRO MARTINEZ (Director of Photography), PATRICK SALVADER (Production Designer), ARMAVENI STOYANOVA (Costume and Jewelry Designer), and SERGIO ROZAS (Audio Visual).

AUTOMATA Opens In LOS ANGELES, NEW YORK and Select Cities as well as VOD
Friday, October 10

Photos: Millennium Entertainment

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