Monday, December 31, 2012

OSCARS: 'Django Unchained's 'Dance Between Reality And Storytelling'

Anthony D'Alessandro is Managing Editor of AwardsLine.

Django Unchained'I think she had to be in there for 20 minutes before I yelled action.' Quentin Tarantino is referring to the time that Kerry Washington spent in the 'hotbox' ' a hole in the ground on a plantation where slaves were sent when they tried to escape. It's where Washington's character Broomhilda is locked up when her husband, Django (Jamie Foxx), arrives at Candyland ' the vast Southern estate owned by her owner Calvin Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio) in Tarantino's Django Unchained. Her voice parched from screaming and her body weakened, Broomhilda doesn't know that Django has come to rescue her with the help of dentist-cum-bounty hunter Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz).

'Kerry is very game to make things as real as possible,' says Tarantino, who as Waltz points out, can often inspire actors with their characters' back stories, 'Leaving her in the box for 30 seconds and then yelling action wouldn't work. Nor would sticking her in the box for hours. But 10 minutes in the box could feel like 30. The idea was for Kerry to become disoriented, lose track of time in there, and contemplate what eight hours in the box would feel like. She could yell or scream.'

'But there was a safe word,' adds Washington, 'so that the crew knew when I was panicking as a person, and not as an actor. This is how a lot of the film went ' taking the reality as far as we could.'

Related: Samuel L. Jackson Lets Loose On 'Django', Tarantino, Slavery, Oscars & Golden Globes

Welcome to Tarantino's Antebellum South. But instead of the Jewish soldiers bashing Nazi skulls in Inglourious Basterds, it's Southern slave Django slaying a slew of white devils to get to his wife who has been sold down the river.

Tarantino is considered a master of cool. But after his box office/Oscar breakout Pulp Fiction ($214 million, seven Oscar noms, with an Original Screenplay win for Tarantino and Roger Avary), he hit a lull. Some of his cinematic homages were relegated to cult status: His double feature with Robert Rodriguez Grindhouse collapsed at $25 million Stateside, and the blaxploitation film Jackie Brown took in $40 million at
the North American box office.

Related: Quentin Tarantino To Receive Rome Fest Life Achievement Award

What happened? His style hadn't changed. Tarantino was still the same ultraviolent, cinema vérité absurdist guy. He struck a nerve, however, with audiences with his own branded subgenre: the historical wish-fulfillment tale in which the oppressed exact revenge. Basterds minted more than $320 million worldwide; earned eight Oscar noms, including director and picture; and turned unknown Austrian star Waltz into a supporting actor Oscar winner. When news broke in April 2011 that Tarantino was prepping a Southern tale much in the same fashion as Basterds, studios and marquee actors wanted in.

'Basterds was something audiences didn't know that they wanted, and that can be a cool thing ' to have something that wasn't articulated to them before,' Tarantino says. 'They knew what other World War II movies were like and didn't want to see the same old tired film again. The same (resonance) could follow through with Django.'

In the same way that Basterds was related to the 1978 Enzo G. Castellari film in title only, so is Django, in regards to the original Sergio Corbucci spaghetti western series (the original Django, actor Franco Nero, makes a cameo opposite Foxx in the film).

Related: Mike Fleming: My Playboy Interview With Quentin

'I am only influenced by Corbucci's oeuvre in terms of the bleak, pitiless, surrealistic West he got across. It wasn't so much Django itself,' says Tarantino, 'As the genre moved on; the name Django became synonymous with all spaghetti westerns. There wasn't even a character named Django in some of these movies.'

Even though Tarantino turns archetypes on their heads, quite often laced with humor ' i.e. Django as the bounty hunter wears a green coat a la Little Joe's get-up on TV's Bonanza while a bunch of pre-KKK men clownishly complain that they can't see through their hoods ' the protagonist's bedrock rests on the life of pre-Civil War African-Americans. Approaching the severity of the material proved to be a grueling dramatic process for the cast.

'I don't know how anyone lived like this in any real way. We barely made it through for nine months,' Washington explains about the emotional pain of shooting on the Evergreen Plantation outside of New Orleans. 'It just added to the resonance of things that we were embodying and portraying these crimes against humanity; that this happened on this sacred ground. There was always this dance between reality and storytelling and the heartache of both.'

To ease the atmosphere during the plantation scenes, Tarantino played gospel music between takes. Nonetheless, the haunting spirits lingered. While preparing for a day's shoot, Washington remembers trying to take her mind off of one scene by taking in the beautiful trees around her on the plantation grounds. Upon noticing one tree without Spanish moss, Washington learned that it was the hanging tree for slaves.

'There were nights when I would text Jamie Foxx at 4 AM and say, 'If this goes on for any longer, I'm not going to make it',' says Washington.

'When you see Leonardo build this eloquent evil character as Calvin Candie, you want to hear those words,' says Foxx about his costar's racist character, who doles out a monologue on the phrenology of slaves. 'Hearing those words, and you hear them enough, it became second hand because that's how they talked back then. Django is the truest depiction of slavery.'

Typically, an adult film with a true depiction of slavery, or World War II, might face an uphill battle getting to the big screen. However, Tarantino is in the fortunate position of being able to finish a script, give Harvey Weinstein a call, and the project is fast-tracked from there. A meeting at the director's house follows, where his friends and the production crew relish a grand reading of his latest work. Sure, having a studio co-financier such as Columbia Pictures on Django enables Tarantino to get bigger budgets, but the director attributes any higher costs on his films 'to moviemaking becoming more expensive. Kill Bill had a huge canvas, but I wanted for nothing.'

Universal coproduced and cofinanced half of Basterds' $70 million budget, in addition to handling foreign, where they catapulted the film's overseas boxoffice to $200 million-plus. But despite the studio's passionate presentation for Django, as reported by Deadline Hollywood, the Weinstein Co. and the producers opted to go with Sony.

Django Unchained'Something spoke to everybody in the room when we met with Sony,' says producer Pilar Savone, who has worked with Tarantino in various capacities across five films since Jackie Brown. Despite Tarantino's early talks with Will Smith for the role of Django, 'partnering with Sony had nothing to do with the studio's connection to Will Smith,' says Django's second producer Stacey Sher who first produced with Tarantino on Pulp Fiction.

What is apparent is that Sony has always been passionate about being in business with Tarantino. 'I remember talking to Amy Pascal at Sony about Basterds. I told her, 'I want this movie to be a hit. I don't want you to do this movie because it's cool to work with me or for just the cache',' says the director. 'And her response to me was, 'We really want to work with you, and we think this will be your most commercial movie.' And the same thing with Django, so we'll see.'

When Smith didn't commit, Tarantino turned to six other candidates including Idris Elba, Chris Tucker, Terrence Howard, Michael Kenneth Williams, and Tyrese Gibson before settling on Foxx, who won the director over with his Texas roots, cowboy image, and his tolerance of racial issues in the current day South (Foxx even used his own mare Cheetah as his horse Tony). Casting Django was the opposite experience Tarantino faced on Basterds: If he hadn't found Christoph Waltz to play the multilingual Col. Hans Landa, the director would have been unable to make the movie.

Related: Harvey Weinstein Unveils 'The Master', 'Django Unchained', 'Silver Linings Playbook' In Cannes

'Quentin was clear with every studio we met with that he wrote the role with no actor in mind. If they did the movie with him, he wasn't going to cast one actor over another,' says producer Reginald Hudlin with whom Tarantino first discussed the Django concept 15 years ago.

'A studio had to be prepared to make the film with an unknown,' adds Sher.

Despite the amount of media attention Django received in its casting of Kevin Costner, Anthony LaPaglia, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and Sacha Baron Cohen, these actors' inability to commit largely boiled down to scheduling conflicts as Django shot across several locales including New Orleans; Jackson, WY; Mammoth Mountain, CA; Big Sky Studios in Simi Valley, CA; and the Melody Ranch in Santa Clarita, CA. Costner was originally slotted to play Ace Woody, a Mandingo trainer at Candyland, while Baron Cohen was to play a poker player Scotty who loses his slave Broomhilda to Candie. Initially, Jonah Hill was unable to commit, however, his schedule opened up, and he makes a cameo as one of Big Daddy's (Don Johnson) klan men.

'We had huge movie stars wanting to do day-player parts,' says Sher, 'These actors are typically number one on the call sheet, so everyone schedules around them. But because of everyone else's schedule and because of snow and weather, we couldn't accommodate everyone.'

While Django was overlooked by the Screen Actors Guild Awards, the Hollywood Foreign Press embraced DiCaprio's performance with a supporting actor nod along with Christoph Waltz as well as three other noms for best drama, director, and screenplay.

And with voter audiences having as much fun at Django as they did with Basterds, all this steam begs the question, does Tarantino have a sequel in mind?

'After shooting for nine months and editing for 12 weeks and going on this Mount Everest press tour, I can't imagine going back,' says Tarantino. 'But there's a story to be told there: Django and Broomhilda still have to get out of the South.'

Related: 'Django Unchained' A 'Shaft' Prequel? So Says Quentin Tarentino

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R.I.P. Mike Hopkins

Oscar-winning sound editor Mike Hopkins drowned in an accident while he and friends were rafting in the Tararua Range in northern New Zealand. Hopkins, 53, was found dead by a helicoptor rescue team after an inflatable craft capsized on the Waiohine River on Sunday afternoon, according to The OneRing.net blog. His rafting companions, a man and a woman, survived. Police told the Australian that all three people were wearing life jackets, wetsuits and helmets and it appeared that Hopkins ran into trouble after they were thrown from the craft in a fast flowing current. Hopkins and Ethan Van der Ryn won Academy Awards for Sound Editing on director Peter Jackson's The Lord Of The Rings: The Two Towers and King Kong. Hopkins, pictured on left with Van der Ryn, first worked for Jackson as sound designer for the director's 1992 horror-comedy Braindead. It was the first of several collaborations over the next 20 years. Hopkins also worked on Heavenly Creatures as well as The Lord of The Rings trilogy. Hopkins and Van der Ryn were also nominated for sound editing on the first of the Transformers movies. Hopkins was also nominated for five British Academy of Film and Television Arts  awards. Hopkins film credits also include ADR or dialogue editor on Public Enemies, Valkyrie, Kung Fu Panda and Dreamgirls. Hopkins is featured in this YouTube video about the sound design for The Lord Of The Rings: The Two Towers:

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

OSCARS: Striving For 'Factual Realism' In 'Les Miserables' Production Design

Cari Lynn is an AwardsLine contributor.

It's not likely that any of the 60 million theatergoers who saw the musical Les Misérables would have thought the stage production limiting, but they weren't charged with taking the longest-running musical, set in 1800s France, and blowing it out to larger-than-life size. In what was described by Working Title producers as a 'deceptively difficult' adaptation, director Tom Hooper assembled a team that included his longtime production designer Eve Stewart and veteran costume designer Paco Delgado to create a factually accurate world, sprinkled with the magic and fantasy of the beloved musical.

But what no one on the team knew going in was that all singing (and the film is 99% singing) would be shot live. This posed interesting challenges for determining locations, given sound considerations and the desire to use very little CGI. 'But,' says Stewart, who was nominated for an Oscar for Hooper's The King's Speech, as well as 1999's Topsy-Turvy, 'new ideas are usually the best ones,' so the constraints didn't narrow her scope as she scouted locations for 20 weeks. She eventually settled on a pristine mountain range in the south of France; the Portsmouth Historic Dockyard in England (where the HMS Victory is moored); an 18th-century rope factory in Kent (the timbers of which were so old that the crew was barred from lighting candles, so imitation flickering lights had to be used); the Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich; the River Avon in Bath; as well as a set crafted at Pinewood Studios in London. In each location, Stewart's crew had to eliminate squeaky floorboards and door hinges, and horses had to be fitted with rubberized hooves. The only location Stewart didn't have to adapt was Boughton House in Northamptonshire, which dates back to the 17th century and is dubbed the 'English Versailles,' where the wedding scene was filmed.

Related: OSCARS Q&A: Tom Hooper

As their inspiration, both Stewart and Delgado went 'by the book''as in, Victor Hugo's 1862 tome, Les Misérables. 'The novel is a recording of how people lived,' Delgado says, 'what they ate, what kind of china they ate the food on, what kind of clothes they wore, what color the clothes were.' Both he and Stewart scoured flea markets and secondhand stores in France and Spain to purchase authentic clothing and furnishings.

Related: Golden Globes Film: Tightest Awards Race In Years

While both studied the artwork of the period'Stewart cites the French artist Gustave Doré, while Delgado drew from Delcroix, Goya, and Ingres'the goal was far from creating a rose-colored world. 'Tom has an amazing level of detail, and he wanted to show the levels of poverty and degradation in Paris at that time,' Delgado explains.

For the set, Stewart incorporated elements of a shipyard, bringing in nine tons of seaweed along with sacks of mackerel and hake that arrived straight from the wharf at 2 a.m. every day so that even the smell was authentic. 'Everything with Tom is factual realism,' Stewart says, 'and then, after that's established, we can amplify and tweak upward.'

Related: OSCARS: The Directors

While the team tried to use as many authentic pieces and landmarks as possible, Stewart spent nearly a month re-creating the 40-foot-tall Elephant of the Bastille (Napoleon's monument that no longer stands but was immortalized in Hugo's book), carved from polystyrene.

Because a portion of the team came from a theater background, the set was initially outlined by building theatrical models, which is not commonly done on film. 'You never know where Tom is going to film,' Stewart says, 'so the buildings had to be (functional) with 360-degree stairs so the cast could run around.' Stewart also took care to craft the buildings with crooked, warped lines, evoking the age and an element of destruction.

Delgado'who had previously worked with Tom Hooper on a Captain Morgan TV ad, and was the costume designer for the Oscar-nominated Biutiful and Pedro Almodovar's Bad Education and The Skin I Live In'had to 'mar' his designs, creating 1,500 new costumes (out of a total of more than 2,000), which he then set about destroying with mud, grease, and blowtorches. 'Paris was so poverty-stricken at that time,' Delgado explains, 'and there was an amazing secondhand market where clothes were sold and resold and resold again until they were rags. It shocked me to learn that most poor people didn't have any shoes.'

Delgado also wanted to tap into what he calls 'the psychological atmosphere' of the time. 'This is about the history of France, but also about the history of the Western world, and it was a big responsibility to create this world, but I also had to remember I was doing a musical with drama, and I needed to have color and fantasy.' One of the most poignant examples was the factory scene, where Delgado dressed Fantine (Anne Hathaway) in pink to contrast against all the other workers in drab blue. 'In the book, Fantine is coquettish and beautiful and had some views of the petty-minded society, so I wanted this dress to belong to her lost past. It was all embroidered and had a level of craftsmanship that would make Fantine appear as an outsider among the rest of the women.'

Hooper and Delgado discussed a leitmotif, so Delgado evoked the colors of the French flag throughout, using blue costumes in the early factory scene, then red for the revolution, and then moving to white for the wedding and nunnery scenes. Delgado also altered the clothes to reflect the characters' states, airbrushing shadows onto Fantine's dress to enhance her wasted frame as she grew close to death, and then moving to the opposite extreme of padding Jean Valjean's (Hugh Jackman) suits as his wealth and standing grew.

Related: OSCARS Q&A: Samantha Barks

'This is our job,' says Delgado, 'to try to interpret personalities and characters.'

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OSCARS Q&A: Hugh Jackman

Pete Hammond

Hugh Jackman has carved out an image as a major movie star who can easily switch gears from action to drama to comedy and all things in between. But until now the man who made Wolverine a household name has never done a movie musical. That's a bit surprising since Jackman also happens to be a classically trained musical star outside of movies. He's starred in stage classics like Oklahoma!, won a Tony on Broadway as Peter Allen in The Boy From Oz, an Emmy for hosting the Tonys, and worldwide recognition for his singing and dancing as host of the Oscars. He recently did a one-man musical show on Hugh JackmanBroadway, and that's one of the reasons he says he is even in Les Misérables and making his long-overdue debut as star of a musical on the big screen.

AwardsLine: Would you consider this to be one of the toughest screen roles you've done?
Jackman: For sure. There is not an element that really wasn't the toughest. One of the reasons I did the Broadway show was to make sure I was vocally fit to not only sing it, but sing it all day long, wake up the next day, and have another 12 hours of it. I put on 29 pounds from beginning to end. Tom (Hooper) told me, 'I want people to worry, I want your friends to think you're sick.' The physicality, the emotional (aspect) acting-wise, was tough.

AwardsLine: You rarely see musicals of this size anymore.
Jackman: That's true. It's a big risk. I'm not surprised it's taken 27 years to get there.

AwardsLine: Despite the fact that the actors in the film are very well-known and talented, I understand everybody auditioned for it.
Jackman: Everybody, and by the way, when I auditioned Tom wasn't signed to the movie, but there looked like there was going to be a clash between The Wolverine and this. I rang up Tom and told him I really wanted to do this part. He said I'd be a perfect shot, but (that) he wasn't even signed on to it but was thinking about it. I asked him if I could audition for him anyway, in case he would sign on to the film. I sang him three songs, and he just sat there for a few minutes and gave me feedback. I could see the director in him. Three hours passed, and I had to put my hand up and tell him, 'Tom, I have to put my kids to sleep.' So I auditioned very early on, and everyone auditioned. 99% of what is shot is live, just the beginning with the water (was not) because you couldn't put microphones in that much water.

Related: OSCARS Q&A: Tom Hooper

AwardsLine: I can't remember another movie musical that did it on this scale'is it helpful to you as an actor to be able to do that?
Jackman: Especially for Les Mis. It's so emotional, and as an actor you have some freedom to go with how you are feeling at the time'to have that restrained by a performance you did three months ago would have been hell. I think it made a huge impact. If Simon Hayes doesn't win an Oscar for the sound design, I don't know who will. What he pulled off is phenomenal. It feels like thought; it doesn't feel like song.

Related: OSCARS: Will Earlier Voting Schedule Influence Nominations?

AwardsLine: There is one new song in the film that you sing called 'Suddenly.' How did they decide to that?
Jackman: That was Tom's idea. Victor Hugo writes about two lightning bolts of realization: First is the virtue and the second is the lightning bolt of love. Tom was like, 'This is one of the greatest moments I have ever seen on film, and we don't have a song for it. This is ridiculous.' They (songwriters Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schönberg) knew my abilities with my voice, and they wrote the song for me. It was a pinch-yourself moment.

Related: OSCARS: The Directors

AwardsLine: Les Mis has been so phenomenally successful for the last three decades'what is it about this show and movie that connects with audiences?
Jackman: It's a really spiritual book, in a nonreligious way: 'To love another person is to see the face of God.' We can live tough lives, but the human spirit is stronger, seemingly, than anything. There is redemption, hope, and love. This book brings this out. All different forms of heartbreak, but beyond all that there is hope, there is love. There is beauty and bliss. Even though the title doesn't make it sound like a romantic comedy, in the end it is. There is something for everybody in it.

AwardsLine: When you watch yourself for the first time, are you nervous going in?
Jackman: I'm more nervous than I have ever been in my life. It's tough to watch a movie (you're in)'you put everything into it, you want everything to work, and you never know until you see it all together. In a musical, those feelings are tripled because you have a lot of elements that have to come together. Watching myself on screen for the first time is a little bit difficult, but watching myself sing on the screen is double the anxiety. In the end, I rationalize it because the nerves are the care and passion I had for the project. It becomes a bit like a baby. I would love to do more movie musicals. Maybe next time I'll do a little more dancing.

Related: OSCARS Q&A: Sacha Baron Cohen

Awards Columnist Pete Hammond - tip him here.

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Weekend Box Office: 'The Hobbit' #1 Passes $600M Global, 'Django' Clobbers 'Les Miz' Which Crosses $100M Worldwide In 9 Days

SUNDAY 1:30 AM, 2ND UPDATE: It's a big holiday weekend, up from last year. Full analysis later today as the holiday box office reveals blockbuster successes and epic fails. For now MGM/New Line/Warner Bros' The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey crossed $200M domestic in 15 nights Friday on its way to $225M. Overseas, Peter Jackson's Middle Earth epic playing in 62 territories has an international cume of roughly $400M going into Sunday. That's about $600M worldwide and still climbing. Surprisingly, Working Title/Universal's Les Misérables placed behind Quentin Tarantino's controversial Django Unchained from The Weinstein Company, quite a feat for an R-rated pic. 'We are having a really big day on Django!' a TWC exec gushes to me Saturday. 'From what I can tell, it looks like we will be very close to Hobbit.' Yowza! Meanwhile, Tom Hooper's musical slips to #3 but crossed $100 million worldwide Saturday in 9 days. Playing this weekend in 8 international territories ' Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Hungary and Spain ' its overseas gross is $36.6M going into Sunday. Combined with the expected U.S. total of $67M, the worldwide cume should be $115+M by then. And Sony Picures' platforming Zero Dark Thirty made another $325K this weekend with a $65K per screen average for a $1.4M cume from just 5 theaters. Here are the Top Ten films based on weekend estimates:

1. The Hobbit (MGM/Wwarner Bros) Week 3 [Runs 4,100] PG13
Friday $10.7M, Saturday $11.3M, Weekend $31.5M, Est Cume $221.3M

2. Django Unchained (Sony/Weinstein) Week 1 [Runs 3,010] R
Friday $9.6M, Saturday $11.2M, Weekend $31.0M, Est Cume $64.0M

3. Les Misérables (Working Title/Universal) Week 1 [Runs 2,814] PG13
Friday $9.4M, Saturday $9.7M, Weekend $27.4M, Est Cume $66.8M

4. Parental Guidance (Walden/Fox) Week 1 [Runs 3,367] PG
Friday $5.0M, Saturday $5.1M, Weekend $14.4M, Est Cume $29.0M

5. Jack Reacher (Skydance/Paramount) Week 2 [Runs 3,352] PG13
Friday $4.5M, Saturday $5.2M, Weekend $14.0M, Est Cume $44.5M

6. This Is 40 (Universal) Week 2 [Runs 2,914] R
Friday $4.1M, Saturday $4.5M, Weekend $12.5M, Est Cume $36.4M

7. Lincoln (DreamWorks/Fox/Disney) Week 8 [Runs 1,966] PG13
Friday $2.3M, Saturday $2.6M, Weekend $7.5M, Est Cume $132.0M

8. The Guilt Trip (Skydance/Paramount) Week 2 [Runs 2,431] PG13
Friday $2.0M, Saturday $2.5M, Weekend $7.0M, Est Cume $21.4M

9. Monsters Inc 3D (Pixar/Disney) Week 2 [Runs 2,618] G
Friday $2.2M, Saturday $2.2M, Weekend $6.2M, Est Cume $18.3M

10. Rise Of The Guardians (DWA/Par) Week 5 [Runs 3,031]
Friday $1.7M, Saturday $1.6M, Weekend $5.0M, Est Cume $90.4M

Related: 'The Hobbit' Back To #1 With $563M Global; 'Les Misérables' #2 With $71.6M Worldwide; 'Django Unchained' #3 With $34M Domestic; Billy Crystal & Bette Midler Beat Tom Cruise

For more estimates listed by title, see box office results here...

Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

Specialty B.O. Preview: 'Promised Land', 'West Of Memphis', 'Allegiance', 'Tabu'

Brian Brooks is Managing Editor of MovieLine.

Matt Damon and Gus Van Sant collaborate on their third project together, Promised Land, headlining the holiday weekend's specialty releases and the final round of newcomers for 2012.  Van Sant came in as director after Damon tapped him to spearhead the film, which is set in small town Pennsylvania. Also headed to theaters is Sony Pictures Classics' West Of Memphis, the latest film centered on the so-called Memphis Three who many believe were wrongly convicted of a grisly murder in a notorious miscarriage of justice. The military takes the spotlight in Allegiance with Aidan Quinn and Bow Wow, which opens via XLrator Media and Adopt Films opens its foreign-language Berlin '12 pick-up Tabu.

Promised Land
Director: Gus Van Sant
Writers: John Krasinski, Matt Damon, Dave Eggers (story)
Cast: Matt Damon, Frances McDormand, John Krasinski, Hal Holbrook, Rosemarie DeWitt
Distributor: Focus Features

Focus Features came on board with Promised Land after the script was completed in partnership with Participant Media. The story moved from an Alaska mining operation backdrop to a small town in Pennsylvania, which must choose whether to allow an energy company to extract natural gas through the controversial method popularly known as 'fracking.' Matt Damon originally was set to direct the film but his schedule made it impossible. He reached out to Gus Van Sant with whom he worked with on Good Will Hunting and Gerry to take on the project. 'They thought the project might go away, but then he contacted me ' and a year ago, I said yes', Van Sant said during a pre-release event last month in New York. 'It is modest [in budget terms] but spiritually strong,' said Focus CEO James Schamus. 'For people looking for an audience experience that doesn't include a body count, this is a great chance. It's an alternative.' Although starring some big names, the pic's budget came in at roughly $15 million.

While the title has remained relatively under the radar compared with some of the other heavy-hitting Oscar contenders crowding theaters, the pic has sparked the ire of pro-fracking interests who have already decided it's 'anti-fracking.' A pro-fracking pic is in the works and proponents have 'been very active in framing the movie as a fracking movie', said Schamus. 'It's a little movie that's national and they've managed to frame it in a particular way and have been extremely effective. They've managed to make it appear as an issue movie but it's not', he said 'Just got to get the movie out there. It's been educational.' Promised Land opens in 25 theaters across 14 markets this weekend including LA, New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston and Washington, D.C. Focus will expand to 1,500 runs on January 4th.

West Of Memphis
Director-co-writer: Amy Berg
Co-writer: Billy McMillin
Subjects: Jason Baldwin, Damien Wayne Echols, Jessie Misskelley
Distributor: Sony Pictures Classics

Sony Classics typically tries to release two documentaries per year and their finale of 2012 will take a cue from its successful Searching For Sugar Man, which is still in theaters since opening in July. 'I think a movie like this needs word of mouth and a local profile as it goes from city to city,' SPC co-president Michael Barker said. 'That's how a movie like this works. It is a similar methodology we used for Searching for Sugar Man and it's a similar methodology we've learned over the years.' In its 22 weeks of release, Sugar Man has taken in nearly $3 million, although Barker said that when they release a doc, they're also looking toward its post-theatrical performance. 'We also look at what impact a theatrical release will have on audiences who see the film after it's out of theaters,' said Barker. 'Films like Inside Job ($4.3 million theatrically in 2010) continue to produce revenue years later. Our goal is to have a successful theatrical release, but for the film to be evergreen over time.'

SPC picked up the film at Sundance where it debuted last year. The subject matter covered in West Of Memphis, which follows a grave miscarriage of justice in the '90s when a group of social misfits were accused and convicted in the brutal deaths of three boys. The story became the subject of Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky's three docs beginning in 1996 with Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills in 1996, which rallied celebrity support for the men convicted, one of whom sat on Death Row. Released from prison but still technically guilty, one of the accused, Damien Echols is a producer on West Of Memphis.

'We were taken by Amy Berg's filmmaking but also the subject of American injustice,' said Barker. 'This kind of case that will continue to play and there's not enough that can be said about this case. People are interested in what happened and what's still happening. We think it's worthy of more movies, more books and even more plays. It's one of those cases in which even more information comes out after all these years.' SPC will open West Of Memphis in five theaters in New York and Los Angeles followed by a slow rollout into additional markets. SPC expects it to have a strong showing in the South.

Allegiance
Director-writer: Michael Connors
Cast: Aidan Quinn, Bow Wow, Seth Gabel, Reshma Shetty
Distributor: XLrator Media

Distributor XLrator received an early version of Allegiance, which centers on a lieutenant in the National Guard who faces the dilemma of one of his soldiers going AWOL as their unit faces deployment to Iraq. I thought if the movie was half as good as the teaser then I'm in,' said XLrator CEO Barry Gordon. 'It's a thriller but there are no bad guys.' The film debuted at the Seattle International Film Festival earlier this year and Gordon bought the film soon afterward. 'I call this the perfect little movie,' said Gordon. 'When you look at multiplatform aspect you can see that there are some that just work. It's a thriller with a military aspect, it's multicultural, it's millennial-youth and also appealing to grandparents. So we see that these are the demos that work across platforms.'

Military personnel advised writer/director Michael Connors in making the film, who himself comes from a strong military background. Financing also came from people with close ties to the military. 'The soldier is not demonized and the military is not demonized,' said Gordon. 'It's a film where people who know [this world] will say, 'this shit really happens.' You know it's made from a soldiers' hand.' Allegiance opened via VOD two weeks ago and is 'doing well,' noted Gordon. Over the holiday weekend, it will bow theatrically in New York, followed by Austin and Los Angeles the following weekend. Further theatrical expansion depends on performance.

Tabu
Director-co-writer: Miguel Gomes
Co-writer: Mariana Ricardo
Cast: Teresa Madruga, Laura Soveral, Ana Moreira
Distributor: Adopt Films

Tabu was one of four films boutique distributor Adopt Films picked up last year at the Berlin International Film Festival. The Portuguese drama-romance revolves around a restless retired woman who teams up with her deceased neighbor's maid to seek out a man who has a secret connection to per past life as a farm owner near Mount Tabu in Africa. 'The film was one of the quartet of films in Berlin that we grabbed this year,' said Adopt Films' Jeff Lipsky. 'We saw it there and fell in love.' Lipsky called the job of distributing the film 'sheer bliss' and noted its critical success save for the ever-important New York Times. Lipsky said that at at time when there's 'minimal interest' in foreign-language film, he sees a symbiotic relationship between Leos Carax's Holy Motors and Tabu. 'We're not an Oscar contender so that allows us to not rush this thing out and that will allow it to breathe,' said Lipsky. 'It's a beautiful dream of a film and the fact it's in black-and-white and 35 mm will be attractive to people.'

The Match Factory sold Tabu, which screened at the New York Film Festival last fall, to Adopt. The distributor will open the title in New York this weekend, followed by LA, Seattle and Minneapolis in January with seven more markets through the first quarte.

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OSCARS Q&A: Walter Parkes

Christy Grosz is Editor of AwardsLine.

Walter ParkesWhen Walter Parkes and his wife and partner Laurie MacDonald read the first 40 pages of John Gatins' script for Flight in 2006, the adult drama about a substance-abusing airline pilot piqued their interest. The dark, character-driven story hearkened back to the type of films the major studios used to make on a regular basis. Neither Parkes nor MacDonald envisioned a high-wattage actor like Denzel Washington taking on the role ' not only was Washington way out of the price range of a film that needed to be made on a modest budget, their main character worked in a field with few African-American pilots. Nevertheless, once the script made its way to Washington's agent, the late Ed Limato, the actor read it and was hooked, according to Parkes. 'The excellence of a project is no longer enough to get it made: It's a combination of the quality of the material, the quality of the people making it, and, honestly, the financial circumstance under which the movie is made,' says Parkes, who points out that Washington's enthusiasm (and, well, severe price cut) helped push Flight to the finish line. Parkes recently spoke with AwardsLine about how it all came together.

AwardLine: Hindsight suggests that Flight was a great project to take on, but did doing a midrange-budget adult drama give you pause when it first came across your desk?
Walter Parkes: It's been so long that the business was slightly different then. We first got involved with the project in 2006. John Gatins sent us 40 pages, the only 40 pages he'd written, which only really took us to the crash and the immediate aftermath. While it wasn't exactly clear where the movie was going, the quality of the writing and the strength of that premise were enticing enough that we felt that, if the script was completed correctly, it would attract terrific elements. And at the end of the day, that is necessary to get a movie like that made. We're talking 2006, before the (financial crisis) and the way it affected Hollywood. You know, there were many independent labels then ' Paramount Vantage would have been a good place for this ' but over the course of the development, they pretty much stopped being in business, as did many of the specialty labels of other studios. All that meant was that it was less of a sure bet that the project would get made, regardless of the quality of the script. It really put it upon us to meet certain other criteria ' mainly, get really amazing people to do it for very little money. (Laughs.)

Related: OSCARS Q&A: 'Flight' Scribe John Gatins

AwardLine: So how did you get those amazing people to participate?
Parkes: I wish we could take credit for a lot of it, and we really can't. Sometimes your job is to keep a project afloat and in the consciousness of the studio, long enough for the right elements to become attached. We worked with John for the better part of 2006 and 2007, and there was a draft, a good draft. There had been conversations with different actors and certain actors chasing it, but there wasn't the kind of explosive combination that would ignite it as a movie to be made. That really happened because Denzel Washington's agent, (the late) Ed Limato, had read it and took it upon himself to call me and Laurie and say, 'This would be extraordinary for Denzel.' We said, 'Great, if he'd be interested'' And about six weeks later, I got another call from Ed saying Denzel read it and he loves it, and he'd love to sit down and talk. So Laurie and I flew to New York, and we had lunch with Denzel. We sat down and Denzel said, 'Well, I'm in.' And I said, 'Denzel, we don't really have a director yet.' And he said, 'We'll get a great director.' And I said, 'The studio hasn't said that they're making the movie,' and he said, 'I understand.' And I said, 'Denzel, it's not that kind of movie where everybody's going to get paid their full rate,' and he said, 'It's a great role, though; it's a great movie. Let's see if it can get done.' But still we went through probably a good year having different conversations with different directors. There was a moment there where John Gatins himself was being considered as the director, and Denzel was open to it, but I think for that role he felt that he needed a more experienced hand behind the camera. But it was all done in the very positive way of, 'How can we make this work?' I had never thought that Bob (Zemeckis) would do this small of a movie, (but) it suddenly began to make sense because he's a pilot, and he was inspired by the screenplay. Once that happened, it felt like we were finally going to make the movie. Even so, there were still fairly stringent financial circumstances that had to be met in order for the movie to be officially greenlit. But, luckily, a director as masterful and experienced as Bob can make a movie like Flight for the price that we made it for.

Related: Oscar Hopeful Takes 'Flight With Bi-Coastal Interactive Launch

AwardsLine: Did you go in knowing that this needed to be in that $30 million dollar range long before anybody was attached?
Parkes: It's not our first time at the rodeo. It was not a conventionally commercial project, so the studio would only feel comfortable if we spent 'x' on it. It's not a bad way of approaching interesting and unique material, which was an approach we used at DreamWorks: Use your professional experience to make a best guess (about) a break-even scenario and see if the movie could be made properly under this financial circumstance. Then if you exceed (expectations), the movie is wildly profitable and successful for everybody involved.

AwardsLine: The film also walks a careful line in tone with having a somewhat unlikable protagonist. Did you have a lot of discussions with John Gatins about maintaining that balance?
Parkes: There's an aspect of the character of Whip as portrayed by Denzel that was absolutely on the page: He was charming; he was high functioning; and he had, even on the page, the kind of competence and swagger that we look to in our heroes. So the fact that all of that in a person that was self-destructive, selfish, and teetering out of control just made it more interesting. We were even less concerned once Denzel was cast, because Denzel has pure charisma ' no matter how dark he goes, as proven by Training Day, somehow the audience never loses connection with him. I also don't think I have ever seen him portray fear like this, portray a man who is much smaller than his circumstances. There's a scene where we're inside the big meeting with Carr, the owner of the airline, and they're all talking about, 'Is he going to jail?' Through the glass, you can see Denzel, and his knees are together, and he's in this suit, and his head is frozen down on a magazine that he's turning the pages of. It's what you do when just don't know what you're supposed to be doing. That kind of vulnerability is just extraordinary.

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Friday Box Office: 'The Hobbit' #1, 'Django' Neck & Neck With 'Les Misérables' For #2

SATURDAY 3 AM: Full analysis later today as the holiday box office reveals blockbuster successes and epic fails. For now MGM/New Line/Warner Bros' The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey crossed $200M domestic in 15 nights Friday. Working Title/Universal's Les Misérables may have placed behind Quentin Tarantino's controversial Django Unchained from The Weinstein Company, quite a feat for an R-rated pic. But that could change with refined numbers. Here are the Top Ten films based on Friday estimates:

1. The Hobbit (MGM/Wwarner Bros) Week 3 [Runs 4,100] PG13
Friday $10.0M, Est Weekend $32.5M, Est Cume $220.0M

2. Django Unchained (Sony/Weinstein) Week 1 [Runs 3,010] R
Friday $9.3M, Est Weekend $28.7M, Est Cume $59.4M

3. Les Misérables (Working Title/Universal) Week 1 [Runs 2,814] PG13
Friday $9.3M, Est Weekend $28.4M, Est Cume $66.5M

4. Parental Guidance (Walden/Fox) Week 1 [Runs 3,367] PG
Friday $5.0M, Est Weekend $14.5M, Est Cume $29.4M

5. Jack Reacher (Skydance/Paramount) Week 2 [Runs 3,352] PG13
Friday $4.5M, Est Weekend $13.2M, Est Cume $43.5M

6. This Is 40 (Universal) Week 2 [Runs 2,914] R
Friday $3.8M, Est Weekend $11.4M, Est Cume $35.3M

7. Lincoln (DreamWorks/Fox/Disney) Week 8 [Runs 1,966] PG13
Friday $2.3M, Est Weekend $7.0M, Est Cume $131.5M

8. Monsters Inc 3D (Pixar/Disney) Week 2 [Runs 2,618] G
Friday $2.3M, Est Weekend $6.5M, Est Cume $18.6M

9. The Guilt Trip (Skydance/Paramount) Week 2 [Runs 2,431] PG13
Friday $2.0M, Est Weekend $6.0M, Est Cume $20.4M

10. Rise Of The Guardians (DWA/Par) Week 5 [Runs 3,031]
Friday $1.8M, Est Weekend $5.5M, Est Cume $90.9M

Related: 'The Hobbit' Back To #1 With $563M Global; 'Les Misérables' #2 With $71.6M Worldwide; 'Django Unchained' #3 With $34M Domestic; Billy Crystal & Bette Midler Beat Tom Cruise

For more estimates listed by title, see box office results here...

Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.

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Friday, December 28, 2012

Oscar Troubles: Online Balloting Confusing Some Members; Controversy Over Best Song Omissions

Pete Hammond

There's exactly one week left to vote for Oscar nominations and there's still 'trouble in River City'.

After reporting on all the problems regarding the registration process for the Academy Of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences' initial foray into the perilous world of online voting for Oscars this year , and then breaking the story about paper ballots being sent automatically to any voter who didn't register or didn't want to attempt voting online, there still seems to be frustration on the part of a number of voters.

Since the voting period opened for nominations on December 17th (it runs thorugh January 3rd) , some disgruntled members have told me it just isn't working very well.  As my colleague Mike Fleming reported the site was even completely down early in the process. The system, which requires members to have a special password (this in addition to their regular password that gains them entrance into the Academy's website) and a code supplied by a phone call to an appointed phone number only when they actually set out to vote, is designed specifically for the Academy by a company, Everyone Counts (the result of an 18-month search),  that does the same thing for the U.S. government with clients including the Department of Defense.  It's so loaded with specific safeguards and military-type encryption methods to keep hackers and imposters out that it is causing extreme frustration for some of those who have tried to vote. As a result some fear it could supress voter turnout although we won't know since the Academy has never released figures of how many  actually vote in the first place.

'It's so poorly conceived. When you think about it I probably won't vote this round as it's too much trouble. They had to reset my password as it wasn't taking it. This requires me to write everything down and know where  I put it,'  said one voter who has a vested interest in the race as they represent a couple of contenders. 'Next year I am signing up for a paper ballot.'  This person did email me earlier today to say they finally voted but only after getting TWO security codes via text. The first was incorrect but the second finally worked and enabled them to vote, 'but I'm pissed off about it'.

The code that voters get only comes up AFTER you get your VIN and then password correct. A warning then comes up and says , 'A one-time security code has been generated for you. You should receive this code via phone call or text message depending on the preference you selected during the Electronic  Voting Registration process. If you do not receive this code within 15 minutes, please click the 'Send New Code' link and a new code will be generated and sent to you'.   Problem is the voter must be by the phone number provided for a call verification before getting the code. The bottom line is many members just don't realize the process they signed up for can be more complicated than writing down a few names and pressing 'send', which is the way it works for other voting organizations that don't provide the kind of hacker temptations  of the Oscars.

One voter told me he accidentally put in the wrong password (his regular Academy password instead of the special one provided for the balloting) and was locked out and had to start over  although he said the Academy's support line was very helpful. At least it is not staffed in India. Yet.

One studio campaign consultant and longtime Academy member told me they were locked out three times before giving up to start trying again tomorrow. For an organization like the Academy coming into the electronic age is not easy and there will always be strong resistance. But unlike every other awards organization the Oscars would really be in danger of getting hacked if some enterprising individual could find a way in. It would be big news. The secrecy and integrity of the Academy's voting process has never been breached in 84 years. It is a dream target. That is why the Academy has meticulously designed a system  than can't be penetrated.  Unfortunately that's precisely how some of its frustrated , less techy, members must be feeling when they try to simply cast a ballot.

For at least one member just getting on  that ballot has been frustrating this year.  Six-time Oscar nominated songwriter Diane Warren had her title song for Silver Linings Playbook ruled ineligible. The song, Silver Linings  plays under one scene for about 40 seconds in the film but the Academy's Music peer group committee that decides these things (Warren herself is a member) held a vote recently and decided it wasn't enough to make it eligible.  They also ruled another song in the film ineligible for similar reasons and even deep-sixed Danny Elfman's score which comprised about 15 minutes of straight underscore. Apparently the committee felt it was overwhelmed by other elements of the soundtrack, meaning a large number of songs, and wasn't 'substantial' enough. Producers of the film and The Weinstein Company were understandably  miffed and Warren says Harvey Weinstein and director David O. Russell even wrote impassioned pleas on her behalf which she read to the music board, but to no avail. 'Their reason is my song wasn't substantial enough in the film, but they don't define what that is. It is a key scene in the film where Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence's characters are rehearsing their big dance. There are 75 songs eligible this year and I can't be one of them?, '  asks Warren. 'If a song says something important, and even if it is only 10 seconds,  then it should be eligible. I'm not saying that I should be nominated, I just wanted to be eligible. The music is like a character in the film.'

Warren  said she was the one who spoke up a couple of years ago about how ridiculous the music branch's complicated  point system of voting was and that changed. She spoke up last  year about returning to the ideal of having five songs nominated instead of two or three  in recent years and that was changed too,  but she doesn't believe her song's exclusion from eligibility was any kind of retribution for being a sqeaky wheel on the committee. She just believes in the tune and its significance for the film. 'I worked harder on this song than any other song in my career. It's the first time I've had a title song in a movie,' she said.

Warren wasn't alone. Among other songs scrapped for various reasons was superstar Taylor Swift's Golden Globe -nominated  'Safe And Sound' from The Hunger Games.

Rules are rules.

Awards Columnist Pete Hammond - tip him here.

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'Argo's' Real- Life People Speak Out About The Mission And The Oscar-Buzzed Movie: Featurette

Pete Hammond

EXCLUSIVE: Appearing on several year-end ten best lists and nominated for 5 Golden Globes, 2 SAG and 7 Critics Choice Movie Awards, Ben Affleck's Argo is clearly one to watch when Oscar nominations are announced on January 10th. The story, set during the 1979 Iranian hostage crisis, tells of a top secret CIA mission  to rescue six Americans hiding out in the Canadian Embassy in Tehran by passing them off as crew members of a fake Hollywood movie production. The effort was successful and the mission was declassified in 1997 finally allowing all the key players to talk about it for the first time. Producer/Director Affleck stars as Tony Mendez, the CIA operative who hatched the wild scheme. In this exclusive featurette Mendez and the six 'house guests' as they were known, along with the actors who portray them,  detail the extraordinary rescue and the movie version that has now earned over $100 million at the box office, with a major re-release reportedly planned by Warner Bros shortly after Oscar nominations are announced. The critically acclaimed October release ironically finds itself competing for Academy attention against another major studio film about a high profile CIA mission set in the mideast, Sony's  Zero Dark Thirty which, though winning wide acclaim  along with several Best Picture honors from critics groups and showing box office power in its initial limited release, has become a controversial political football and denounced by key Senators and the acting head of the CIA for what they claim is playing with the truth. Because the hunt for Osama bin Laden is still classified and top secret , most of the real people depicted in that film can't talk or even have their actual idenities revealed. In the battle for credibility, always an issue with fact-based movie versions, this gives  Argo a distinct advantage in having the real people involved  available to tell their story and directly validate the movie,  precisely the point of this featurette.

Awards Columnist Pete Hammond - tip him here.

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Deadline Big Media With David Lieberman, Episode 16

Here's episode 16 of our audio podcast Deadline Big Media With David Lieberman. This week, Deadline Executive Editor Lieberman and host David Bloom ponder what are likely to be some of 2013's biggest questions in the business of Big Media: Are we headed for a fundamental restructuring of the pay-TV business? Will DirecTV and Dish merge? Will Pay-TV providers declare open season on pricey and underperforming channels? Will a cabler get out of the TV programming business altogether? Will there be an Apple TV and what does it mean for Hollywood? And can Netflix corner the streaming video market or will it risk overextending itself?

Deadline Big Media Episode 16 (MP3 format)
Deadline Big Media Episode 16 (MP4A format)

The M4A version of this podcast is designed to run on any device using Apple's iTunes software, and includes enhanced graphics and links to stories and other resources. The MP3 version of this podcast is designed to play on virtually any device capable of playing digital audio.

For those using non-iTunes software to listen to the podcast who want to automatically receive the 'Deadline Big Media' podcasts in their non-iTunes 'podcatcher' software, you can subscribe at http://www.deadline.com/big-media-podcast/

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Thursday, December 27, 2012

R.I.P. Gerry Anderson

Gerry Anderson, creator of UK television series Thunderbirds and other marionette and live-action shows, died today in a nursing home near Oxfordshire, England. Anderson had suffered from Alzheimer's since 2010, and his condition had recently worsened significantly, his son Jamie wrote on his website. Anderson was 83. Although Thunderbirds aired for just two seasons on Britain's ITV after debuting in 1965, it became an international sensation. In syndication, the high-tech tales of adventurers rocketing around the world to fight evil-doers became a staple of Saturday morning and weekday afternoon kids programming in the U.S. Anderson's first work with puppets was Granada TV's The Adventures of Twizzle, about a doll that could 'twizzle' his arms and legs to greater lengths. Anderson and his associates developed a technique that became known as Supermarionation. The system used audio signals from recordings of the actors' voices to trigger electronics in the puppets' heads that enabled synchronization of dialogue with the puppets' lip movements. Anderson's other productions included Space: 1999, UFO, The Day After Tomorrow, Captain Scarlet And The Mysterons, Supercar and Fireball XL5, but he was best known for Thunderbirds. Its success led to two feature films, Thunderbirds Are Go (1966) and Thunderbirds 6 (1967). Anderson was not involved in the 2004 feature Thunderbirds although his ex-wife Sylvia Anderson served as a consultant. That same year, Anderson's Thunderbirds also inspired South Park creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker's Team America: World Police, which depicts a similar team's efforts to quash terrorists. Celebrities paying tribute on Twitter included comedian Eddie Izzard, who wrote: 'What great creation Thunderbirds was, as it fueled the imagination of a generation.'

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OSCARS Q&A: Directors Of Photography

Thomas J. McLean is an AwardsLine contributor.

Steven SpielbergDon't write that obituary for film just yet. The traditional moviemaking format remains a vital tool for the top cinematographers in the field, even as digital technology improves and offers exciting possibilities for the future. AwardsLine caught up with the men who shot some of the year's top contenders to talk about how they shot their current films, working with the top directors in the field, and how to make it all come together in the end.

Taking part in our mock roundtable are Mihai Malaimare Jr., who used large-format 65mm film to shoot the majority of Paul Thomas Anderson's The Master; Claudio Miranda, who shot the sole digital and 3D picture of this bunch, Ang Lee's Life of Pi; Wally Pfister, who mixed IMAX and 35mm in wrapping up Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy on The Dark Knight Rises; Rodrigo Prieto, who stitched together multiple formats for Ben Affleck's Argo; Ben Richardson, who relied on 16mm to capture Beasts of the Southern Wild for Benh Zeitlin; and Robert Richardson, who reunited with filmophile Quentin Tarantino for Django Unchained.

AwardsLine: How did you go about choosing cameras and formats for your current projects?
Rodrigo Prieto: We wanted to differentiate the different segments of the film. We were going to intercut and wanted as soon as you saw an image, say, in Tehran that you would know that's where you are just by the texture of the image, especially because we were shooting in very different locations.
Mihai Malaimare Jr.: From the first meeting we had, we were discussing using a larger format for The Master. The reason is when you think about iconic images from that period, like from the '30s and right after World War II, you are mainly thinking of large-format still photography. We started with VistaVision, but because the difference wasn't that big from 35mm to VistaVision, we switched to the next bigger format which was 65mm, and that was giving us kind of the feeling that we wanted.
Life Of PiClaudio Miranda: Ang (Lee) was really interested in 3D. He said, 'I've been really interested in 3D for almost 10 years now. Even before Avatar, I really wanted to see how to bring a new language to cinema.' It had to be digital, because with 3D it had to be really precise.
Wally Pfister: Chris (Nolan) sat back and said, 'Here's the deal: This film will stand on its own, but we are wrapping up a trilogy.' We had discussions early on about shooting in IMAX, and I said, 'Dude, we should shoot the whole movie in IMAX.' But we pushed up against the limitations of IMAX, which is you can't record synched sound with an IMAX camera ' they're just too noisy.
Ben Richardson: We instinctively knew that the only viable way for our budget and to get the kind of imagery we wanted was to go to 16mm. The great thing about a 16mm camera, obviously, is that as long as you have a couple batteries and a roll of film and a changing tent, you can keep shooting.

Related: OSCARS: The Directors

The Dark Knight RisesAwardsLine: Was it a challenge to make different formats work as a cohesive whole when cut together?
Pfister: We go through a bit of analysis for what makes sense for that story. The obvious reason for shooting IMAX is because you want to put something spectacular on the screen that's going to have a visceral impact on the audience. In other circumstances, Chris wants the camera to have a more of a looser, documentary feel. So you use different tools and different formats and different methods to convey the story in different ways.
Prieto: Once we started testing all these different things, I projected them next to each other, and we saw that the looks were apparent and were visible, but we didn't feel it was jarring, given that it was all the same aspect ratio. Also, the story has this drive to it that helps it all come together.

AwardsLine: How important is having an established relationship with a director versus working with someone you've not worked with before?
Robert Richardson: I think having an established relationship with a director is unbeatable. The shorthand that comes from a relationship that is longstanding, especially when both sides of the party are respectful of each other, is a tremendous benefit. I'm not opposed to working with a new director, but you do have to approach it differently because you don't know each other yet. You tend to be a little more cautious.
Miranda: You definitely have to figure out where directors will let you go or not let you go, and it's all about establishing that kind of communication. With Ang, we just talked back and forth about how we feel about lighting, and he let me go a lot.
Beasts Of The Southern WildBen Richardson: Working with a director I maybe knew less well, we might have had to cover a lot of ground to find the common ground. But I think we had a fairly solid understanding of each other's wishes off the bat, so our daily conversations in terms of shot lists and shot planning were very much in the realm of an established aesthetic that we both understood.

Related: Oscars ' Distinguishing Best Visual Effects Not As Easy As It Looks

AwardsLine: How did you approach environment and character on your film? Did you see them as separate elements or two parts of a whole?
Prieto: On Argo, the environment plays a very important role because every situation the characters are in is based on where they are. These environments really affect the characters' behavior and their emotional states very much in this film. I really tried to support and enhance the sense of this environment and how it's affecting them.
Ben Richardson: In terms of the environments, we didn't so much storyboard as follow a shot list. We would go in with a sense of what we needed to achieve, but we would primarily allow the locations and the environments we found to dictate the way certain scenes could feel or could behave.

AwardsLine: Give one example or scene that demonstrates how cinematography was used to tell the story.
Miranda: I feel like the golden light is kind of a serene moment. He's throwing this can in the air, and just the way it was captured ' we shot it as a very wide shot ' and he realizes that in the large ocean this is a really futile idea, and he gets really reflective. He has a little peek at the tiger, and they have a little eye connect. I feel like that was a pretty cinematic moment.
ArgoPrieto: The one that came to my mind is when the houseguests are at the bazaar. I think the cinematography there was using the light to express this feeling of vulnerability, of being scared, and they're overexposed ' the light was several stops overexposed.

Related: 'Life Of Pi' Sales into Oscar Race; Ang Lee Interview, Featurette

AwardsLine: With so many digital environments used in movies today, how do you collaborate with the digital artists who are doing everything from effects and environments to color grading?
Ben Richardson: If we had been able to, we might have gone as far as trying to find a way to do a photochemical finish. So it was very important to me that that sort of photochemical feel be preserved all the way through, and I worked very closely with our DI (digital intermediary) house to do a workflow that basically emulated the way you did a traditional answer print. In regards to the visual effects, I had been a key part from the beginning in terms of figuring out how we were going to do those scenes with the beasts. I was very much in touch with Benh (Zeitlin) and the visual effects supervisor as we worked on that stuff because to me that really was the fantasy high point of the film.
Pfister: As cinematographers, we light in a very ' at least I do ' visceral, gut kind of fashion, like I'm throwing paints on a canvas. The visual effects guys, they analyze lighting, and they try to re-create it, so it's much more of a technical process for them, but they're really starting to understand it now. Their work has gotten better and better, so for me it's just looking at the end and commenting on whether it's matching or not.
Miranda: I stayed involved in the DI. Bill Westenhofer, who did the visual effects, was there. Even the editor was there, and he was very involved in the 3D because he had made a lot of choices in the Avid for 3D placement and staging and correcting.

Related: Oscars: Parties, Q&As, Campaigning More Rampant Than Ever

The MasterAwardsLine: What makes your job easier? What makes it harder?
Robert Richardson: The most difficult thing would be to have a script that hasn't yet solidified. To work with something that is in fluctuation continually can be a horror show.
Pfister: What makes my job easy is working hard. The hardest part of the job is really if people around you are not working as hard as they should be.

AwardsLine: What is the most exciting development in the field? What has you most excited about the future of cinematography?
Robert Richardson: I'm excited by the movement toward digital cinematography. I think it's opening up opportunities for a re-evaluation of lighting, and I don't mean in the sense that it looks like a reality show, but you can work at lower levels.
Malaimare: I think this is a really interesting moment because you can still shoot on film for projects that you think will work on the format or you can shoot digital. What's even more interesting is the fact that you can find really cheap digital cameras ' that doesn't necessarily help the cinematography, but it helps the audience because they are going through a self-training process. The audience is getting more aware of what capturing or creating an image can be and, of course, they have higher expectations because of that.

Related: OSCARS ' Ben Affleck And Team On The Making Of 'Argo'

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