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#41 | |
Member
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#42 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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OMG YES! I love this film.
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Thanks given by: | FSTargetDrone (03-04-2025), WBMakeVMarsMovieNOW (03-06-2025) |
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#43 |
Senior Member
Sep 2024
Bay Area
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I just remember this was, like, the 80th movie starring Jude Law that released in 2004
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Thanks given by: | D00mM4r1n3 (03-05-2025), Trekkie313 (03-04-2025) |
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#44 |
Blu-ray Baron
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Only way this movie could be better if Rachel Brosnahan was in Paltrow's role. You need someone with a Fleishers' Lois Lane flair to her.
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Thanks given by: | Robbie The Robot (03-05-2025) |
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#47 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I also think "NEW 4K Transfer From The 35mm Digital Negative" it's Shout's weird fancy way to say ''filmout negative'' or, more to say the negative struck from the digital composite made in 2004. I really don't think this will be an upscale - upscales only work for movies from the 2010s and up. And even so. Paramount has been doing most 1990s-2000s DI works from filmouts, so this one shouldn't be a surprise.
I also expected no new extras, being that this is a Shout! Select title, and that the director doesn't seem to be up to the task to reminisce the movie much, even if they're proud of the people that love it. I suppose it's a constant reminder of the hurt, the dissapointment of the years after. Either way, while no new extras suck - the original 2004 ones are more than amazing. And it's nice to have them in the same package. |
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#48 |
Senior Member
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Variety had a phone call with Kerry Conran last year that sort of answers some questions about what happened with this movie and his career:
Were you satisfied by the finished result? And if not, was there a point of distance that gave you a clearer perspective on the film? At the time I thought it certainly was far from perfect, and that fell entirely on my shoulders. And I’m accepting of that. I don’t think I failed as much as I wish the film had done better in the box office, but there are reasons for that. It was never engineered to be what it was later presented as. I genuinely was hoping to get the film into Sundance when I was making it by myself and be this independent film that was different from the other independent films because it felt bigger. What it became was something different. I would say that Jon and certainly the studio gave me more opportunities and stayed away as much as they could, so I would not characterize it as a horror story where someone came in and completely changed things. We cooperated and I did my best to accommodate them. But in retrospect, because a film’s success these days is whether it makes money or not, it didn’t do the ultimate thing it was supposed to. As it was, there’s a lot of misconceptions about what the film cost. Like I said, when we first started making it, our budget went from $3 million to $10 million, in that range. The film ultimately cost somewhere in the neighborhood of $12 million or something like that. That additional money wasn’t from me, it was making it color. Also, Paramount had a “Mission: Impossible” film that wasn’t going to be ready, so they needed something for their winter release. I didn’t promise it because at the time it was simple math to tell you how long it was going to take us, because our little meager render farm could generate only so many frames per hour. So that’s when additional money came online to kind of buy more computers. There was also a lot of money at stake for [financier Aurelio de Laurentiis], who sold it. And that’s where the budget discrepancy, I think, comes from: he made a lot of money off the sale of the film, and we didn’t apply that to the film itself. But again, even as a $12 million film, I think it would’ve been regarded as very successful, but not as whatever the projected budget was in the end. And Paramount did pay a lot of money, but that was above my pay grade, as they say. So the $70 million that was previously reported refers to the cost of selling it to Paramount, or that Aurelio made from picking up distribution? I know what Paramount paid for the film when we had 10 minutes of footage that we ended up showing to every studio in town. Aurelio was claiming the film costs a lot more than it did, and it looked like it. So the amount being bid on the film was high — high enough that I heard that Aurelio bought a soccer team with the amount of money. So somebody probably did lose a lot of money, but it wasn’t because of this film. That is sort of where the disappointment comes from … my naivete. You make these things, and Aurelio took a gamble himself certainly, and if he made a profit on it, good for him. I think it came a little bit at my expense, if not a lot, but that is business. But that sort of made the effort harder in terms of what the film had to make back. How much did that perception impact the opportunities that you got afterward? Hugely. The perception was there was a lot of money lost in the film, and it just had nothing to do with me or the film itself. But at the time I was working with Sherry Lansing, who was the head of Paramount at the time, and she really loved what I’d made. They had the rights to “John Carter of Mars” at the time, and that was going to be the follow-up film to this. So we started on it using similar techniques, and it was coming along great. But Sherry left Paramount, and so this new regime came in that I had no history with, and all they saw was, why is this kid that lost us all this money working on this big film? I had probably worked on “John Carter” for nearly a year, and we were very, very close to casting and shooting. But the person that ultimately made the decision had a strong relationship with Jon Favreau at the time and was looking for something for him. So that was kind of handed off to him. And then I briefly was doing something with DreamWorks, a live action animated thing. And two years probably after [“Sky Captain”] had come out, I decided this is not for me. I mean, I can’t spend a year on something that I put all this effort and work into and walk away from it. So I decided to go back and just try to do my own things again. But I do think had the film made $100 million, I think we’d be talking about a different body of work. But I’m not dead yet. |
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Thanks given by: | BluZone (03-15-2025), f451 (03-12-2025), James Luckard (03-04-2025), KIDplus (03-13-2025), LarryT (03-04-2025), MartinScorsesefan (03-06-2025), Maxwell Everett (03-04-2025), Nepenthe (05-19-2025), PonyoBellanote (03-04-2025), professorwho (03-05-2025), ravenus (08-28-2025), Robbie The Robot (03-05-2025), The Sovereign (03-07-2025) |
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#50 |
Banned
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It was shot 1.78 digital. A few extra scanlines (which gets eaten by overscan on a lot of displays) doesn't mean the Blu-ray wasn't OAR.
Last edited by PeterTHX; 03-04-2025 at 03:39 PM. |
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#51 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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This man is so talented and deserves better. Really hoping he can make things one day.. |
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Thanks given by: | James Luckard (03-04-2025), Justin_Playfair (03-13-2025) |
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#52 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#55 |
Senior Member
Jul 2012
Arvika, Sweden
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I'm not sure what to expect from this.
Always hated the ugly smeary digital look. But maybe the negative, will help it look more like film, thanks to real filmgrain, but I'm keeping my expectations low, and wait for the reviews. The movie is fun, but I wish it was shot on film, with real sets, and only kept the CGI for the action scenes. But you could say the same for Attack of the Clones, and other digitally shot films, from the era. |
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#56 |
Senior Member
Jun 2013
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I really hope both brothers know that the movie does have an audience and a lot of love and appreciation. It is a rare gem and they totally nailed the tone and references. It's clearly a love letter to a bygone era and you can see their passion on the screen for sure.
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Thanks given by: | MartinScorsesefan (03-06-2025), PonyoBellanote (03-05-2025) |
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#57 | |||
Blu-ray Samurai
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Thanks given by: | Justin_Playfair (03-13-2025), Robbie The Robot (03-06-2025) |
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#58 | |
Senior Member
Jul 2012
Arvika, Sweden
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But in my opinion, they went overboard with the smeary/dreamy filters. You can tell they also used it, to hide the seams, from the greenscreen, as the edges of the actors, are very blurry. But let's see how it looks in 4k. |
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Thanks given by: | PonyoBellanote (03-05-2025) |
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#59 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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I think this is a 5 star movie, up there with The Rocketeer for me. Perfect pulp adventure.
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Thanks given by: | bud_brigman (03-07-2025), gkolb (03-07-2025), hbenthow (03-18-2025), Justin_Playfair (03-11-2025), jvonl (03-05-2025), Okiephile (03-20-2025), Robbie The Robot (03-06-2025) |
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