I’ll admit it. I’m a sucker for BIG BUDGET sci-fi and
fantasy movies! Every year the huge Hollywood studios pump out several $100 –
$200 million dollar special effects opuses for fanboys to drool over in anticipation
every year. The first of these mega-buck epics for 2012 is John Carter!
John Carter is Walt Disney Pictures’ attempt at another tent-pole
film for a new franchise on the order of their Pirates of the Caribbean films.
After failing with Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (2010), which cost an
estimated $200 million to make and only grossed a little over $90 million in
the United States, they are rolling the big budget dice with John Carter. The
budget for John Cater is being estimated at $250 million and if the trailer is
any indication, most of that was spent on the vast special effects to create the
fantastic setting for the fantasy-version of the planet Mars.
John Carter the film is based on the novel "A Princess of
Mars" by Edgar Rice Burroughs, published under the title "In the Moons of Mars"
and serialized in All-Story Magazine in 1912. In the novel, John
Carter is a former Confederate soldier, who, while prospecting for gold in the Arizona
desert of the 1870’s is somehow transported to the planet Mars. It looks as
though the film John Carter has kept the time and character intact; which is
the only possible way that the fantasy setting of Mars could work.
The director of the film is Andrew Stanton, who was the
director and writer of the Pixar animated films A Bug’s Life, Finding Nemo and
WALL-E. This is his first live action feature, but his experience with the all
CGI animated features should serve him well for the effects laden John Carter.
Another former Pixar director, Brad Bird (The Incredibles and Ratatouille) has
had great success with his first live action feature Mission Impossible: Ghost
Protocol, so there is hope that Andrew Stanton might have similar luck with
John Carter.
Portraying John Carter is 30 year old Taylor Kitsch, who is
best known for his role as high school football star Tim Riggins on NBC's
acclaimed television series "Friday Night Lights”, but will also be
featured in another big budget film in 2012 Battleship. Playing the Princess
Dejah Thoris is relative unknown Lynn Collins. Voicing (and motion capturing?)
Tars Tarkas is veteran actor William Dafoe.
The special effects are headed by Steve Benelisha, who has
worked recently on Captain America: The First Avenger and X-Men: First Class.
I think Disney is taking a real chance on John Carter,
because the source material is not nearly contemporary or classic enough to be recognizable
to a large enough audience to sell it on name recognition alone. Also, by
releasing it in March, instead of the summer months when most blockbusters are
released, they are almost already admitting defeat. Perhaps they are hoping to
score at least the meagerly profitable numbers that Clash of the Titans made,
which was released in April of 2010.
Whatever the reasons for such an early release, I most
certainly will be headed to my local cinema on the weekend of March 9th
to see the visual splendor of John Carter! Enjoy the latest trailer!
Already a fan of the old stories, here's hope for a swell film too. Seeing as how it already looks pretty!
ReplyDeleteI read the first novel, A Princess of Mars, when I was a teenager and even then I found the prose to be too dated to enjoy the fantastic elements of the story. I did read and enjoy the Marvel Comics series John Carter of Mars back in the late 1970’s, which takes place at the time of the first novel. Despite my limited exposure to the source material, I feel like I have a good enough grasp on the Burroughs’ style to know if the new film is attempting to at least keep the essence of the original books.
ReplyDeleteI agree that not only does “it look pretty good”, it look pretty damn awesome!