Friday Mar 12
InterviewBritish star Jemma Powell talks Alice in Wonderland
09/03/2010 | Nikki Baughan

We grab an exclusive interview with Brit actress Jemma Powell, soon to be seen in Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland!


InterviewJohnny Depp Takes Us Inside The Mind of The Mad Hatter
08/03/2010 | Sheila Roberts

One of the highlights of Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland is Johnny Depp's performance as The Mad Hatter; here, we chat to the star about his relationship with the director and the wonders of green screen... This is the seventh film you’ve done wi [ ... ]


More Features

Surrogates

Interview

Jonathan Mostow, director of Surrogates, tells us why his Bruce Willis-starrer is no ordinary sci-fi movie...

Surrogates, director Jonathon Mostow’s blockbuster adaptation of the acclaimed graphic novel by Robert Venditti and Brett Weldes, is a sci-fi action-thriller starring Bruce Willis and set in a alternate version of present day Boston. It’s a version of contemporary Bean Town that looks quite familiar - no space-age megadomes or flying cars - apart from the suspiciously flawless appearance of its citizenry. They all look like movie stars; not a blemish or a hair out of place, let alone an actual physical deformity. It’s as if the Stepford Wives had colonized the city with their picture perfect offspring - which, in fact, is not so very far from the case.

09In the world of Surrogates, people lock themselves away in the safety of their homes while their lives are lived by idealized, android versions of themselves. It’s an arrangement that, though it purports to eliminate crime and any number of other social ills, naturally has its share of implications, some more sinister than others. It also gives rise to some interesting parallels with how our own lives have been transformed by the on-rush of cyber technology.

“I guess you could call it a robot movie,” says Mostow, “and there have been a thousand of those. But I think this one is different. It just seemed to fit closely with how we live our lives today. What Surrogates is all about is how people retain their humanity in the face of relentless technology. I got that instantly from reading the script. It’s about how people are tethered to their electronic devices such as mobile phones, Blackberrys, etc; how they do their shopping on the net; how you’re not talking to a person you’re talking to a piece of software when you call the customer service line.”

05And if that sounds off-puttingly cerebral, don’t fret. Mostow promises plenty of blockbuster action and intrigue to go with the smart stuff. “What’s interesting about the graphic novel,” he says, “is that it goes into all that with these inserted sections where the story stops and there are several pages of fake news reports and things like that. You can’t really do that with a movie. With a movie you’ve got the audience for two hours and it’s all about telling the story. This is a big-budget studio movie so of course, it’s got all the chases and explosions you’d expect. Even so the meaning comes to the surface anyway.”

The story in question revolves around veteran BPD detective Greer (Willis), a hard-bitten old-timer who pounds the beat in the guise of a pretty boy surrogate, keeping his vulnerable body safely at home, attached to his cyber-self’s sensory transmitters. Things go haywire for Greer when a serial killer starts offing people via their surrogates, something their manufacturers claim is impossible. The investigation and the revelation that surrogates do not render people invulnerable to violent crime - to say nothing of the ethical issues raised by surrogatehood - lead Greer to question the entire system.

12“My question before we ever screened Surrogates for test audiences,” says Mostow, was, “Are people going to get what we’re talking about here? Or are they just going to enjoy the chases and explosions? It was great to find out that, even though it plays like a mystery, suspense action movie, all the focus groups wanted to talk about was the social commentary. I’ve never seen that happen before.”

Apart from shifting the setting of the graphic novel from Atlanta and the time zone from the future to the present day, Mostow’s Surrogates (adapted by writers Michael Ferris and John D. Brancato) rejects the comic book’s dark tone for an altogether brighter look. This, he explains, was partly out of necessity. “To create the idealized, surrogate versions of the actors there’s a lot of makeup effects,” he says. “We had an Oscar-winning makeup team. There’s a lot of CGI, too, but in addition to that, we had to light everybody in the most flattering way possible. So, going for the dark, moody look of the novel would have destroyed that illusion.”

07The lead role of FBI Agent Greer was difficult to cast due to its dual nature, but Bruce Willis was the perfect fit, so the choice of was a no-brainer, according to Mostow,. “Bruce was absolutely top of our list from the beginning for several reasons,” he says. “First of all, I think he’s a very underrated actor. When he does the big action movies, people don’t realize how much craft goes into those performances. Part of that craft with Bruce is that he makes even the most outrageous circumstances credible. No matter what he’s doing - and in Surrogates he does some pretty crazy things - you always believe him. Secondly, he’s the perfect age. I wanted Greer to be real, a guy who has got some mileage on him, so there’s the contrast with his surrogate who is young and vital. Bruce makes that work. And lastly, he has a track record of playing tough cops and detectives, but he also has a definite science fiction cache because of things like Twelve Monkeys, The’ Fifth Element and Armageddon.”

surrogatesposterThere’s every indication that Surrogates will be that rare thing - a big budget Hollywood sci-fi movie that, in the vein of 2001: A Space Odyssey and Blade Runner, actually provides food for thought alongside the eye-candy. “This is not a bubble-gum movie,” says Mostow. “It’s definitely got the stuff you’d expect from a Bruce Willis, sci-fi - action film. But it takes the subject matter seriously. There’s nothing frivolous about it.”

Play New Surrogates Trailer

Interview by Walt Disney


Features Archive

Where the Wild Things Are
This Is It
A Christmas Carol
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince: EXCLUSIVE Daniel Radcliffe Interview Plus Cast Chat and Review!
Kirk, Nero, Sulu & Chekov Talk!
(500) Days of Summer
Zombieland
Spock, Uhura & Bones Speak!
Interview with Inglourious Basterds Director Quentin Tarantino!
Orphan
Terminator Salvation Clip & Interviews
Michael Sheen
Let the Right One In: Interview & Clips
Inglourious Basterds
Public Enemies
Land of the Lost: Exclusive Red Carpet Interviews!
FlashForward
Crank 2
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince Cast Speak!
Vicky Cristina Barcelona
Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs
Interview With This Is It Musical Director Michael Bearden
Inglourious Basterds Featurette With Tarantino & Cast!
Exclusive Chat With Sounds Like Teen Spirit Director Jamie Jay Johnson
This Is It Choreographer Travis Payne Speaks!
This Is It Director Kenny Ortega Reveals All
Mesrine: Killer Instinct
Surrogates
Terminator Salvation: Stars Anton Yelchin and Bryce Dallas Howard on Fighting the Future
The Proposal
Arnie's Terminator Salvation Cameo & Featurettes!
Terminator Salvation: Christian Bale Speaks
The Good, The Bad, The Weird
Terminator Salvation: Director McG Reveals All
JJ Abrams Talks Trek
The Best of Cannes 2009
Whip It
FrightFest 2009 Calendar
Cirque du Freak
Cause and Effects
Amelia
Terminator Salvation: Sam Worthington On Being the Missing Link
The Ugly Truth
Che
Mall Movies!
Roland Emmerich, John Cusack & Amanda Peet Take Us to the End of the World in 2012
Wolverine Interviews
Up
Head Turners: The Best Movie Monsters
Behind the Scenes of Marley & Me
Drag Me To Hell's Sam Raimi & Alison Lohman Reveal All!
Watchmen Week! The Comedian and Rorschach Drop In
My Sister's Keeper
My Sister's Keeper: Nick Cassavetes
Edge of Darkness
Paranormal Activity: The Scariest Mockumentaries Of All Time
The International: Interviews
Beverly Hills Chihuahua Cast Interviews
Watchmen Week! Dr Manhattan & Ozymandias Reveal All
Carey Mulligan and Peter Sarsgaard Give Us An Education
Morgan Freeman and Matt Damon Discuss Clint Eastwood's Invictus
Charlize Theron and Guillermo Arriaga Discuss The Burning Plain
The Blind Side
Knowing Trailer & Clips
Walter Salles: Exclusive Interview
Jim Carrey Says Yes, Man
Bolt
Exclusive Interview With Delta Screenwriter Yvette Biro
Watchmen Week! Nite Owl & Silk Spectre Speak
The Life Before Her Eyes Trailer
Sydney Film Festival Insider's Report: Week 2!
Director Adam Shankman Tells Us a Bedtime Story
The Damned United: Clip & Premiere Pics
Watchmen Week! Director Zack Snyder Talks...
Paul Blart Clip, Interview & Trailer
Watchmen: New Trailer & Interviews!
Hell Ride: Exclusive Clip!
Bryce Dallas Howard On The Loss Of A Teardrop Diamond
Johnny Depp Takes Us Inside The Mind of The Mad Hatter
We Chat To Alice In Wonderland Stars Helena Bonham Carter, Anne Hathaway and Michael Sheen!
Tim Burton Takes Us Down The Rabbit Hole...
British star Jemma Powell talks Alice in Wonderland

Highlights

Alice in Wonderland

alicefeat2_thumbWe chat to Alice in Wonderland director Tim Burton and stars Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham-Carter, Michael Sheen, Anne Hathaway and Jemma Powell

READ MORE: Alice in Wonderland


Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans

badltfeat_thumbNicolas Cage tells us all about harnessing his demons to play a troubled cop in Werner Herzog's Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans

READ MORE: Bad Lieutenant


Percy Jackson

percyfeat_thumb

In an exclusive interview, director Chris Columbus tells us how he's updated Greek mythology with Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief...

READ MORE:Percy Jackson

Movie Highlight

Shutter Island

Mind games

It's 1954, and on an isolated island off the coast of Boston lies the notorious Ashecliffe psychiatric hospital. When one of the patients mysteriously vanishes, Detective Teddy Daniels (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his new partner Chuck Aule (Mark Ruffalo) arrive to solve the disappearance. Coming up against a secretive and tight-lipped staff, headed by Dr Cawley (Ben Kingsley), Teddy finds his investigation hampered at every turn. When he finally discovers what's been happening in the heavily-guarded lighthouse, Teddy thinks he's well on the way to cracking the case. But, as he begins having powerful dreams about his time spent liberating German concentration camps during WWII, and vivid hallucinations of his dead wife (Michelle Williams), can Teddy leave Shutter Island before it claims his sanity?

READ FULL REVIEW: Shutter Island

DVD Highlight

An Education

Directed by Danish film-maker Lone Scherfig, An Education is a coming of age drama is set in early 1960s Twickenham. Adapted by Nick Hornby from Lynn Barber’s memoir, the story revolves around intelligent teenage schoolgirl Jenny (Carey Mulligan) who has her head turned by the much older David (Peter Sarsgaard). As her burgeoning romance with David sweeps her along in a whirlwind of expensive presents, foreign trips and increasingly adult pursuits, Jenny is forced to decide between continuing her education and following her feelings.

READ FULL REVIEW: An Education

Like it? Share it!