Movie News

Here you can find our Movie News section which includes all the latest and related articles, trailers and reviews for films and more.

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Movie News

First Look At Josh Hutcherson In The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2

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Following a first look at Jennifer Lawrence and Liam Hemsworth, a first look at Josh Hutcherson in The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 has been released.

Hutcherson, who reprises as Peeta, posted the image on Twitter along with a next Tuesday’s date, which is speculated to be the reveal of the new trailer.

The next installment of the record-breaking franchise, “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay– Part 2,” will be released on November 20, 2015, directed by Francis Lawrence and starring Academy Award winner Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, LiamHemsworth and Woody Harrelson.

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Movie News

Captain America: Civil War Crossbones Art

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New Captain America: Civil War promo art has surfaced featuring Frank Grillo’s Crossbones.

Check it out below.

Frank Grillo recently let it be known that he had wrapped filming on the movie, but also teased that Crossbones may not be done just yet.

“Captain America: Civil War” has  a May 6, 2016 release date directed by Anthony and Joe Russo starring Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Elizabeth Olsen, Sebastian Stan, Anthony Mackie, Frank Grillo, Paul Bettany, Don Cheadle, Emily VanCamp, William Hurt, Martin Freeman and Chadwick Boseman as Black Panther.

Synopsis:

Captain America: Civil War picks up where Avengers: Age of Ultron left off, as Steve Rogers leads the new team of Avengers in their continued efforts to safeguard humanity. After another international incident involving the Avengers results in collateral damage, political pressure mounts to install a system of accountability and a governing body to determine when to enlist the services of the team. The new status quo fractures the Avengers while they try to protect the world from a new and nefarious villain.

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Movie News

Beast Wars Transformers Movie A Possibility

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Paramount, Michael Bay, Steven Spielberg, Lorenzo di Bonaventura, Mark Vahradian, Hasbro’s Brian Goldner and Akiva Goldsman have put together a writers room for a shared universe of Transformers movies.

The writers on board include newly announced Ken Nolan and Geneva Robertson-Dworet who join Christina Hodson, Lindsey Beer, Ant-Man writers Andrew Barrer and Gabriel Ferrari, The Walking Dead creator Robert Kirkman, Iron Man scribes Art Marcum and Matt Holloway, Pacific Rim 2‘s Zak Penn and Amazing Spider-Man 2 and Losts Jeff Pinkner.

Now Goldmsman has shared some of the Transformers plans, with mention that a Beast Wars movie would even be possible.

“If one of the writers discovers an affinity for Beast Wars, they can drive forward on treatments that will have been fleshed out by the whole room,” Goldsman told Deadline.

The first order of business for the writers room is coming up with an idea and script for the fifth Transformers movie, which will be directed by Michael Bay. It’s reported Paramount wants the script ready when Bay is done with his latest movie 13 Hours.

Goldsman also offered the following details in regards to the writers room Transformers process:

“I got a taste of this from JJ Abrams when I came in to write an episode of Fringe, and then Jeff Pinkner let me hang around for four years like the drunk uncle. The whole process of the story room was really delightful, and we are seeing it more in movies as this moves toward serialized storytelling. There are good rooms around town, including the Monsters Room at Universal, the Star Wars room, and of course, at Marvel. We’re trying to beg, borrow and steal from the best of them, and gathered a group of folks interested in developing and broadening this franchise. There is a central corridor of movies that has been proceeding quite well, but our challenge will be to answer, where do we go from here?”

“We’ve got a work space that is beautifully production designed to be immersive with a strong sense of the franchise history. We will look at the toys, the TV shows, the merchandise, everything that has been generated by Hasbro, from popular to forgotten iterations, and establish a mythological time line. It has been designed with a lot of visual help, toys, robots, sketches and writers and artists. After that super saturation, the writers will figure out not one, but numerous films that will extend the universe.”

“It just felt like such fertile ground and a rich environment for storytelling, and there has already been thoughtful work done long before any of us came into the room. We will be innovative miners, and we will have fun and get to do what we imagined this was all about when we were kids.”

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Movie News

Win A Role In Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2

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Win a walk-on role in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2.

TMNT 2 has launched an Omaze fund raiser for the Charlotte and Gwenyth Gray Foundation to cure Batten disease.

Fans can enter to win a walk-on role, which includes being flown in for a set visit with the cast and being put up in a 4-star hotel.

The Charlotte and Gwenyth Gray Foundation to Cure Batten Disease was established to raise the necessary funds to progress this urgent medical research in order to save the Gray girls and all children impacted by Batten disease. After lots of questions and many tests, 4-year-old Charlotte Gray was diagnosed in March 2015 with Late Infantile NCL Batten Disease CLN6. Her family quickly learned this neurodegenerative brain disease is extremely rare and would leave Charlotte blind, immobile, cognitively impaired, and, ultimately, dead between the ages of 6 to 12. Charlotte’s younger sister Gwenyth was immediately tested and given the same grim diagnosis. Due to its rarity, solutions for this presently incurable and fatal disease have received minimal research, focus and funding. But there is hope; three promising treatment options exist, including a potential cure.

Updated with video of Megan Fox:

Mikey. Leo. Donnie. Raph. And YOU! Want to win a walk-on role in the TMNT sequel? Megan Fox wants to tell you all about it.ENTER: http://bit.ly/BE-IN-TMNT

Posted by TMNT Movie on Tuesday, June 9, 2015

“Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2” has a June 3, 2016 release directed by David Green and produced by Michael Bay, Andrew Form and Brad Fuller, starring Megan Fox as April O’Neil, Will Arnett as Vernon, Stephen Amell as Casey Jones, Tyler Perry as Baxter Stockman, Brian Tee as Shredder, with the movie also featuring Bebop and Rocksteady.

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Movie News

Ron Perlman Starts Hellboy 3 Social Media Campaign

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Hellboy 3 was thought long and gone, but now Ron Perlman has taken to Twitter to bring it back to life.

Perlman tweeted: “Anybody out there wanna see #HellboyIII as much as I do? Let’s get this muthafucka trending, y’all! Let’s end the trilogy; we earned it!”

The tweet has since been retweeted over 11,000 times and favorited over 9,000 times.

Geek Tyrant also points out Doug Jones, who played Abe Sapien, joined in, as Jones tweeted: Locking elbows with you, Big Brother Red!! #HellboyIII”

Guillermo del Toro stated last year Hellboy 3 wasn’t on the cards due to finance issues, but perhaps with Perlman starting a Twitter campaign, something is brewing.

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Movie News

Guardians of the Galaxy 2 Has Less Characters & Gunn Nixed A New One

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In addition to James Gunn finishing the script for Guardians of the Galaxy 2 and Chris Pratt stating the story brought him to tears, new details are learned about the sequel.

James Gunn has been using the new Periscope App as of late and answered a bunch of questions about Guardians of the Galaxy 2.

Screen Rant jotted down some of the answers with the most notable being Gunn mentioning Guardians of the Galaxy 2 will actually have less characters.

Gunn, who removed Richard Rider Nova from the Nicole Perlman’s first Guardians of the Galaxy script, also lets it be known he removed another character for this movie. He confirms instead of two new characters, there will only be one (assumed to be a Guardian).

“People ask for so many characters to be in Guardians of the Galaxy 2 and they ask for so many actors who they want to be in Guardians of the Galaxy 2 but we actually have less characters in Guardians of the Galaxy 2 than we have in Guardians of the Galaxy 1 because everything is just getting too sprawling and too crazy for me in these superhero comic book movies. And also in superhero comics in general. There’s just too many characters so you can’t concentrate on one and really get to know that character, and I really want to get to know the characters that we know better, and yeah, we will be introducing a new character…”

“I did not get any help with the first draft of Guardians of the Galaxy 2 other than I wrote a scriptment which I’ve been working on for nine months, and I wrote that very, very in-depth scriptment which is a 70-page combination of a script and a treatment and it goes through every beat of the movie, everything, and I’ve been going through that and showing that to [Marvel Studios Boss] Kevin [Feige] and getting feedback and seeing what worked and what didn’t, what characters work, what didn’t. I mean, people will be disappointed – at some point I’ll release – but I had another big character in my original draft and it was just getting too busy. I took that character out. And it’s a character I like a lot and hope to work with in the future but I just didn’t have room for that person, that character.”

Some other tidbits Gunn mentioned include:

Guardians of the Galaxy 2 is “not forced to fit in puzzle pieces from other creators nor is it required to serve as setup for Avengers: Infinity War.”

The Guardians movies don’t follow the comics too close because a lot of the Marvel Cosmic characters aren’t owned by Marvel Studios.

The five core Guardians are returning along with Yondu, Nebula and Kraglin.

It hasn’t been mentioned whether the Nova Corps will be involved.

Star-Lord’s father has not been cast, yet.

Scott Chambliss is the new production designer (known for Abram Star Trek movies, Mission Impossible).

Guardians is the most standalone series Marvel has.

Gunn said he is going to wait until after Guardians 2 to decide if he will do Guardians of the Galaxy 3.

Gunn also again said on Facebook that the Hulk isn’t involved.

“Guardians of the Galaxy 2” has a May 5, 2017 release.

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Movie News

First Look At Jennifer Lawrence & Liam Hemsworth In The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2

Check out a first look at Jennifer Lawrence and Liam Hemsworth in The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2.

Lawrence released the image on Facebook adding the following, which may be the trailer reveal for next Tuesday.

6.9.15 #MockingjayPart2 #Unite

The next installment of the record-breaking franchise, “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay– Part 2,” will be released on November 20, 2015, directed by Francis Lawrence and starring Academy Award winner Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, LiamHemsworth and Woody Harrelson.

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Movie Trailers

New Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation Trailer & Posters

Check out a new trailer above  for Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation in addition to new posters below.

Mission Impossible: Roge Nation has a July 31, 2015 release directed by Chris McQuarrie starring Tom Cruise, Jeremy Renner, Simon Pegg, Alec Baldwin and Rebecca Ferguson.

Synopsis:

The new flick finds Hunt’s highly effective but destructive Impossible Mission Force (IMF) disbanded by vengeful Washington bureaucrats such as the CIA chief (played by Alec Baldwin). But Hunt pulls his team together (Jeremy Renner, Simon Pegg, Ving Rhames and newcomer Rebecca Ferguson) to battle the shadowy force known as “The Syndicate” and its elusive leader (Sean Harris).

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Movie Trailers

New Footage In Terminator: Genisys Spot

Check out new footage in the above Terminator: Genisys spot.

“Terminator Genisys” has a July 1, 2015 release starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, Emilia Clarke as Sarah Connor, Jason Clarke as John Connor and Jai Courtney as Kyle Reese.

Synopsis:

When John Connor (Jason Clarke), leader of the human resistance, sends Sgt. Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney) back to 1984 to protect Sarah Connor (Emilia Clarke) and safeguard the future, an unexpected turn of events creates a fractured timeline. Now, Sgt. Reese finds himself in a new and unfamiliar version of the past, where he is faced with unlikely allies, including the Guardian (Arnold Schwarzenegger), dangerous new enemies, and an unexpected new mission: To reset the future…

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Marvel Movie News

Ant-Man Website Gets Ant-Sized Update

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The official Ant-Man Marvel website has been updated with an interactive design giving users the ability to view the site as an ant or a human.

When the various images and text are clicked on, the page zooms in for the human view. You can then zoom out for the ant-sized view.

There is also a voice amplifier feature that will switch between Paul Rudd’s ant-sized voiced and human-sized voice.

Check it out at: marvel.com/antman.

Ant-Man” has a July 17, 2015 release directed by Peyton Reed starring Michael Douglas as Hank Pym, Paul Rudd as Scott Lang, Evangeline Lilly as Hope Van Dyne and Corey Stoll as Darren Cross/Yellowjacket.

Synopsis:

The next evolution of the Marvel Cinematic Universe brings a founding member of The Avengers to the big screen for the first time with Marvel Studios’ “Ant-Man.” Armed with the astonishing ability to shrink in scale but increase in strength, master thief Scott Lang must embrace his inner-hero and help his mentor, Dr. Hank Pym, protect the secret behind his spectacular Ant-Man suit from a new generation of towering threats. Against seemingly insurmountable obstacles, Pym and Lang must plan and pull off a heist that will save the world.

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Movie News

James Wan Directing Aquaman

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It’s being reported James Wan will be directing the Aquaman movie.

Deadline states the director of Fast and Furious 7 has closed a deal for Aquaman with Warner Bros. that will feature Jason Momoa as the King Of Atlantis.

A plot description for the Aquaman movie is also offered in that: An icon for over 70 years, Aquaman is the King of the Seven Seas. This reluctant ruler of Atlantis, caught between a surface world constantly ravaging the sea and Atlanteans looking to lash out in revolt, is committed to protecting the entire globe. 

“The Aquaman film will be a major tentpole picture for us and James’s span of work has proven him able to take on any manner of project, bringing his incredible creative talent and unique voice to the material,” said Warner Bros’ Greg Silverman in an announcement.

James Wan will oversee the script from Kurt Johnstad, with Charles Roven, Deborah Snyder and Zack Snyder producing.

Jason Momoa will first appear in Batman vs. Superman next March.

Aquaman has a 2018 release.

Updated: with official announcement.

 

Press Release

James Wan to Direct Jason Momoa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ Upcoming Aquaman Feature

 

Warner Bros. Pictures announced today that director James Wan (“Furious Seven,” “The Conjuring”) will take the helm of the Studio’s upcoming Aquaman feature film, with Jason Momoa (“Game of Thrones”) starring as the sea-dwelling Super Hero. The announcement was made today by Greg Silverman, President, Creative Development and Worldwide Production, Warner Bros. Pictures.

Silverman stated, “We’ve been so lucky to have worked with James, first on New Line’s ‘The Conjuring’ and now on their upcoming ‘The Conjuring 2,’ and are thrilled to have him on board as we continue to expand our DC slate. The Aquaman film will be a major tentpole picture for us and James’s span of work has proven him able to take on any manner of project, bringing his incredible creative talent and unique voice to the material.”

Wan will also be supervising the script by Kurt Johnstad (“300,” “300: Rise of an Empire”). The film is being produced by Charles Roven, Deborah Snyder and Zack Snyder.

Roven said, “James is not only a great storyteller but can make action truly explode on the big screen, and Jason has a dynamic presence that commands your attention. Together, they will bring an undeniable vitality and energy to this character as he headlines his first feature film.”

An icon for over 70 years, Aquaman is the King of the Seven Seas. This reluctant ruler of Atlantis, caught between a surface world constantly ravaging the sea and Atlanteans looking to lash out in revolt, is committed to protecting the entire globe.

Currently set for a 2018 release, the film is based on characters appearing in comic books published by DC Entertainment

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Movie News

Sebastian Stan’s New Look For Captain America: Civil War

Check out the new beard Sebastian Stan is sporting for Captain America: Civil War.

The actor posted the image on his Instagram account and teased using the hashtags: #marvel #civilwar #pickyourside.

“Captain America: Civil War” has  a May 6, 2016 release date directed by Anthony and Joe Russo starring Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Elizabeth Olsen, Sebastian Stan, Anthony Mackie, Frank Grillo, Paul Bettany, Don Cheadle, Emily VanCamp, William Hurt, Martin Freeman and Chadwick Boseman as Black Panther.

Synopsis:

Captain America: Civil War picks up where Avengers: Age of Ultron left off, as Steve Rogers leads the new team of Avengers in their continued efforts to safeguard humanity. After another international incident involving the Avengers results in collateral damage, political pressure mounts to install a system of accountability and a governing body to determine when to enlist the services of the team. The new status quo fractures the Avengers while they try to protect the world from a new and nefarious villain.

 

#marvel #civilwar #pickyourside

A photo posted by @imsebastianstan on

 

Having A weekend!

A photo posted by @imsebastianstan on

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Movie News

Josh Trank & Simon Kinberg Defend Fantastic Four Casting

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With Fantastic Four only about two months away, we hear from Simon Kinberg and Josh Trank as they talk about the controversy surrounding the casting of the movie.

What’s interesting is not only do the two talk about Michael B. Jordan being cast as Johnny Storm, but also Jamie Bell as Ben Grimm, aka The Thing.

“I knew it was going to get ugly,” Trank told the LA Times, who himself is a part of a mixed family. “I get it. I have a lot of friends who are older than me who are comic fans and it’s really hard for them to be on board with a change like that. Fantastic Four has been theirs for longer than I’ve been alive. It hasn’t been mine.”

Tranks continues with the argument that Fantastic Four is more similar to the real world.

“… you can’t just keep telling it the same way over and over again,” Trank offered. “And I think it only helps the world to be more honest with young kids, to show them the world that they go walk outside and see.”

Now regarding Jamie Bell as The Thing, Simon Kingberg steps in to offer an explanation.

“The change of Jamie as Ben being a smaller guy instead of a bigger guy, for example, was for a purpose,” Kinberg explained. “It’s more dramatic when that character becomes a huge rock creature – that’s a bigger transformation. The notion of a working-class tough guy who’s been pushed around by his bigger brothers his whole life seemed like a more interesting character than the guy who started as a football player and just ended up being 4 inches taller.”

Kinberg continues by comparing the Fantastic Four casting to that of Hugh Jackman as Wolverine.

“If you look at Hugh Jackman as Wolverine, everybody was upset at first that Wolverine was tall and now nobody can imagine anybody else other than Hugh Jackman playing Wolverine.”

“Fantastic Four” has an August 7, 2015 release directed by Josh Trank from a screenplay by Jeremy Slater, Simon Kinberg and Josh Trank; produced by Matthew Vaughn, Simon Kinberg, Hutch Parker, Robert Kulzar and Gregory Goodman; starring: Miles Teller, Michael B. Jordan, Kate Mara, Jamie Bell and Toby Kebbell.

Synopsis:

FANTASTIC FOUR, a contemporary re-imagining of Marvel’s original and longest-running superhero team, centers on four young outsiders who teleport to an alternate and dangerous universe, which alters their physical form in shocking ways. Their lives irrevocably upended, the team must learn to harness their daunting new abilities and work together to save Earth from a former friend turned enemy.

Trailer:

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Marvel Movie News

WB Exec Talks DC Vs. Marvel Movies, Batman Vs. Superman & Wonder Woman

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Warner Bros. film chief Greg Silverman offers updates on the DC slate of movies in an recent interview with THR.com.

Regarding how WB will differentiate the DC movies from Disney’s Marvel movies, Silverman offers:

We have a great strategy for the DC films, which is to take these beloved characters and put them in the hands of master filmmakers and make sure they all coordinate with each other. You’ll see the difference when you see Batman v. SupermanSuicide SquadJustice League and all the things that we are working on.

There is intensity and a seriousness of purpose to some of these characters. The filmmakers who are tackling these properties are making great movies about superheroes; they aren’t making superhero movies. And when you are trying to make a good movie, you tackle interesting philosophies and character development. There’s also humor, which is an important part.

Silverman also comments on Michelle MacLaren leaving Wonder Woman, with Patty Jenkins coming on to direct:

We had a very intensive process looking at everybody. Patty and Michelle were really the ones who came to the forefront the first go-round, so when things didn’t work out with Michelle, we all knew we had someone great who had expressed interest before. She came back and is doing a great job. But it was never about the best female director. She has demonstrated doing amazing work with female characters, such as in Monster.

Wonder Woman also had multiple writers on the project with each writing different scripts. Silverman explains the reasoning:

Every project is different. On some projects, we have multiple writers working together. In some cases, we put writers together who have never been a team together. And sometimes, there is only one writer whose voice is right. In the case of Wonder Woman, the right approach was to have writers pitching different scenes within the framework we created.

“Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” hits March 25, 2016 followed by “Suicide Squad” on August 5, 2016, with “Wonder Woman” and “Justice League Part 1” in 2017.

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Movie News

Fallout 4 Trailer & Announcement

Bethesda confirmed the upcoming global release of Fallout 4, the next generation of open-world gaming.

The world premiere of the game will take place during Bethesda’s E3 Showcase being held at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California on June 14th beginning at 7.00pm PST, and streamed live around the world via Twitch and YouTube.

Fallout 4 is being developed for Xbox One, PlayStation 4 computer entertainment system and PC by award-winning Bethesda Game Studios under the direction of Todd Howard.  This eagerly-awaited game is the follow up to the 2008 ‘Game of the Year’, Fallout 3, and the first title from the world-renowned studio since the release of their global phenomenon and 2011 ‘Game of the Year’, The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim

“We know what this game means to everyone,” said Game Director, Todd Howard, “The time and technology have allowed us to be more ambitious than ever. We’ve never been more excited about a game, and we can’t wait to share it.” 

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Movie News

Martin Freeman’s Role Rumored For Captain America: Civil War

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The Hobbit star Martin Freeman has been named to be a part of Captain America: Civil War in an unknown role.

Now the mystery role may be revealed.

Possible spoilers follow.

Latino Review is stating Martin Freeman is playing Edward Chase, the Prime Minister of England who is in favor of super human registration.

It’s suggested that Andy Serkis was on the phone with Chase during The Avengers 2 when Klaw mentioned: “Now, Minister, where were we?”

According to the rumor, a joint international mission goes south at the start of Captain America: Civil War that involves British soldiers, with Chase arguing for a better worldwide plan to keep the Avengers in check.

It’s also said Chase may be attempting to collect Vibranium (what the phone call was about) to use against super humans.

It’s further suggested that Chase’s motives make it appear as if the character is a villain in the movie as he is set against the Avengers (or at least Cap’s side).

“Captain America: Civil War” has  a May 6, 2016 release date directed by Anthony and Joe Russo starring Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Elizabeth Olsen, Sebastian Stan, Anthony Mackie, Frank Grillo, Paul Bettany, Don Cheadle, Emily VanCamp, William Hurt, Martin Freeman and Chadwick Boseman as Black Panther.

Synopsis:

Captain America: Civil War picks up where Avengers: Age of Ultron left off, as Steve Rogers leads the new team of Avengers in their continued efforts to safeguard humanity. After another international incident involving the Avengers results in collateral damage, political pressure mounts to install a system of accountability and a governing body to determine when to enlist the services of the team. The new status quo fractures the Avengers while they try to protect the world from a new and nefarious villain.

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Movie News

Guardians of the Galaxy 2 Story Brought Chris Pratt To Tears (Video)

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James Gunn recently let it be known that he completed the first draft of the Guardians of the Galaxy 2 script.

Gunn previously mentioned the movie will be about family as well as Star-Lord’s father, and now Chris Pratt offers his take on the story.

While doing press for his latest film, Jurassic World, Pratt told Digital Spy the Guardians of the Galaxy 2 story brought tears to his eyes.

In the video below, Pratt states he knows “everything” about Guardians of the Galaxy 2 when mention is made of Star-Lord’s father, and Pratt also says he has talked with Gunn about the music for Awesome Mix Vol. 2 and continues with his thoughts on the story.

“His pitch and his ideas legitimately put tears in my eyes,” Pratt said. “It is so good.”

Pratt also offered Guardians of the Galaxy 2 is “so big” and that Marvel felt it was perfect. Check out more in the video below.

Guardians of the Galaxy 2 is due out May 5, 2017; Pratt stars in Jurassic World, out June 12th.

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Movie News

No Samuel L. Jackson For Captain America: Civil War

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It’s learned Samuel L. Jackson will not be a part of Captain America: Civil War.

Jackson recently spoke with Collider where he let the news be known.

I’m not in Captain America 3. I can’t figure that out, but I’m not. I guess I’m still out there, trying to figure out what happened to S.H.I.E.L.D. and who these other people are.

The article notes Jackson has two more Marvel movies left on his contract, which may mean Nick Fury is being saved for the Avengers: Infinity War movies, but Jackson offers he still wants to stick around for more.

“Of course [I’m interested in returning]! I’m looking for a contract extension right now, yeah. I’m looking to re-up.”

Jackson has been featured as Nick Fury in seven Marvel movies as well as video games and Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D.

“Captain America: Civil War” has  a May 6, 2016 release date directed by Anthony and Joe Russo starring Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Elizabeth Olsen, Sebastian Stan, Anthony Mackie, Frank Grillo, Paul Bettany, Don Cheadle, Emily VanCamp, William Hurt, Martin Freeman and Chadwick Boseman as Black Panther.

Synopsis:

Captain America: Civil War picks up where Avengers: Age of Ultron left off, as Steve Rogers leads the new team of Avengers in their continued efforts to safeguard humanity. After another international incident involving the Avengers results in collateral damage, political pressure mounts to install a system of accountability and a governing body to determine when to enlist the services of the team. The new status quo fractures the Avengers while they try to protect the world from a new and nefarious villain.

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Movie News Star Wars

Ewan McGregor & Darth Maul Star Wars Spinoff Rumored Again

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It’s once again being said that Disney may be going with a Star Wars spinoff featuring Ewan McGregor as Obi-Wan Kenobi, which may even feature Darth Maul.

Back in March of 2013, we first revealed possible details that Disney was considering a Star Wars spinoff with McGregor and Maul.

We were told it could be set between Star Wars Episode III and Episode IV featuring Ewan McGregor reprising the role of Obi-Wan Kenobi in his exile on Tatooine, with the villain being Darth Maul who hunts down his nemesis with a possible plot point involving a young Luke Skywalker somehow tied into the story possibly as bait for Obi-Wan.

Now over two years later, Shmoes Know is reporting pretty much the same thing.

A source is theirs is stating conversations are taking place behind close doors that McGregor wil once again “transform into the venerable Jedi Master, Obi-Wan Kenobi” – not as a “force ghost, but for a post-Episode III Kenobi.” 

It’s also aid Disney wants an Obi-Wan Kenobi trilogy of films, which would be outside the new anthology spinoffs.

Regarding the possible plot of the Obi-Wan Kenobi movie, according to the source the: “film (or films) would focus on Obi-Wan’s adventures between the two trilogies as he watches over a maturing Luke Skywalker. The film(s) would be standalone adventure(s), with the possibility of characters like Owen Lars and Darth Maul appearing.”

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Movie News

No Mark Strong For Green Lantern Reboot (Video)

Probably the best part of the Green Lantern movie was Mark Strong’s portrayal of Sinestro as well as the post-credit tease.

With Zack Snyder and WB relaunching Green Lantern, MTV caught up with Mark Strong and asked if there is a chance he may return.

Strong says with a reboot happening, he is sure they are going to go with a whole new look and different group of actors.

As of now, the new Green Lanten movie is still a ways off as it’s due to be released in 2020.

It’s also specualted we’ll see the new Green Lantern in the 2017 Justice League movie, but regarding just which GL will be featured is currently unknown as it could be Hal Jordan, John Stewart or even Kyle Rayner.

The only rumor surrounding Green Lantern was mention that Chris Pine might be up for the role; however, that rumor seems to be squashed as it’s recently been said Pine is up to play Steve Trevor in the Wonder Woman movie.

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Movie Trailers

Watch: How The Avengers 2 Should Have Ended

Check out “How The Avengers: Age Of Ultron Should Have Ended!” And it’s only part 1! The How It Should Have Ended YouTube channel put together the above video, which offers animated takes on various movies offering alternate endings in parody form.

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Movie News

First Draft Guardians of the Galaxy 2 Script Completed

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We are one step closer to Guardians of the Galaxy 2.

James Gunn posted earlier on Facebook that he just completed the first draft script of the sequel.

Gunn teased an image of the title page mentioning it took him almost two months to complete.

Phew. After 48 days straight without a day off, the the first draft of ‪#‎GotG2 ‬is done. I’m sorry to all my friends and family who I have ignored.

No specifics are known about the movie other than Gunn previously stating it will be about family and look to explain the identity of Star-Lord’s father, which will be different than the comic book version. Gunn also said the movie will take deeper look at who the characters are, and we’ll get to know more about Gamora, Nebula and Yondu.

I’m also guessing Gunn will be applying that deeper approach to the villain of the movie. I know Gunn said something to the effect he wished he could have done more with Ronan, so hopefully whoever – or whatever – is the big bad this time out will be fully explored.

There has also been talk of two female characters joining the Guardians – maybe Mantis and Moondragon?

Fans are also hoping for an Adam Warlock appearance, and many online are speculating Starhawk may very well be Star-Lord’s father.

Gunn also previously let it be known that Marvel said his approach to Guardians of the Galaxy 2 is risky, which is rather interesting, as it means Gunn isn’t going to simply copy what he did with the first movie.

It will also be interesting to see what direction Guardians of the Galaxy 2 takes: Will it lead to other Marvel Cosmic movies? Or will Marvel bring it down to Earth connecting it to the Avengers: Infinity War movies?

Guardians of the Galaxy 2 is due out May 5, 2017.

Phew. After 48 days straight without a day off, the the first draft of #GotG2 is done. I’m sorry to all my friends and family who I have ignored.

Posted by James Gunn on Tuesday, June 2, 2015

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Marvel Movie Trailers Star Wars

Disney Playmation Avengers Trailer & Announcement

Today, Disney Consumer Products introduced the world to Playmation – the next step in the evolution of play, where digital gets physical and imagination becomes real. The groundbreaking system of toys and wearables uses smart technology to inspire kids to run around and use their imaginations, as they become the hero or heroine of stories from across The Walt Disney Company.

“Innovation and creativity are the driving forces behind Disney, and our goal is to inspire children to unleash the power of their imaginations through the stories we tell and the experiences we create. With Playmation, we’re taking the next step in that tradition – bringing the worlds of play, storytelling, and technology together – in a new and very exciting way,” said Leslie Ferraro, president of Disney Consumer Products.

She continued: “Playmation takes the best the digital world has to offer and uses it to create supercharged, real world play. This is play updated for today’s kids – bringing their imaginations to life as they go on active adventures alongside their favorite characters.”

Dreamed up by a team of technologists, Imagineers and storytellers from across The Walt Disney Company, Playmation is the culmination of extensive research into the world of play. A new third party study commissioned by Disney1 reveals that parents feel nostalgia for the way they used to play growing up and that they also have a desire to keep their kids active. The study also found that children enjoy being active—yet at the same time, they have a growing appetite for technology-infused products.

The online study of 2,000 families across the country shows that while almost all parents believe in the power of active and creative play, they believe technology is also an important part of growing up today. In fact, 9 out of 10 parents are open to new technology that could play a role in keeping their child active.

“The study highlights a major opportunity to meet the needs of both parents and kids with a new way to play,” said Kareem Daniel, Senior Vice President, Strategy and Business Development. “Playmation uses technology to make active, physical play even more fun. It puts kids at the center of our stories in a way we’ve never been able to before.”

Playmation also marks a new chapter in Disney Consumer Products’ long-term partnership with Hasbro. DCP and Hasbro collaborated on physical product design and manufacturing of Playmation. Hasbro’s record of innovation and consumer insights make them the perfect partner to ensure that Playmation is a truly ground-breaking play experience.

“This is classic play for the millennial generation,” said Jim Silver, editor in chief and CEO of TTPM. “Playmation takes the role play category to a new level of engagement with their breakthrough interactive play. It is the entry point into a new category of toys that bring digital experiences into the real world. With Playmation, Disney Consumer Products is going to raise the bar in the world of play.”

Playmation Marvel’s Avengers is the first in a series of systems in development around Walt Disney Company franchises, and will hit shelves this October. At launch, the Playmation Marvel’s Avengers Starter Pack will include five connected toys: one piece of Avenger Gear (Repulsor), two Power Activators and two Smart Figures – a Super Hero (Captain America) and a Super Villain (Iron Skull). Getting started is easy, strap the high-tech Repulsor Gear onto your arm (it fits adults, too!) and listen closely to JARVIS as he takes you through the tutorial on how to control your new Gear, inspired by Iron Man technology. Other Playmation Marvel’s Avengers connected toys that work with the Starter Pack will also be available separately for purchase at launch, with more on the way.

Also available at launch, is the AvengersNet app where you can register your Avenger Gear to see progress, explore additional locations and characters, and get access to new missions. New recruits to the Avengers can fight Marvel Super Villains including Ultron, Iron Skull, Loki, or join fellow Avengers Super Heroes like Black Widow, Falcon and more as they battle to save the Earth by running, jumping, ducking and dodging – whatever each challenge requires.

“With Playmation Marvel’s Avengers, the very best of Marvel storytelling is infused into every aspect of the system to further spark imaginative, active play,” said Joe Quesada, Chief Creative Officer, Marvel. “Playmation offers kids a dynamic way to interact with their favorite Super Heroes – I wish it was around when I was a kid!”

Playmation Marvel’s Avengers uses familiar technologies including smart toys, wearables, wireless technology, motion sensors and more, but applies them in ways that are completely new to create an experience that’s never been possible before. The Repulsor Gear connects with the Power Activators and Smart Figures to take you on a variety of adventures through locations around the Marvel Universe, from the Avengers Lab in New York to the jungles of Wakanda. Playmation is purposely not tethered to an Internet connection so players can run around and explore each adventure from anywhere they want – a bedroom, living room or yard. With multiplayer modes, recruits can sync their Avenger Gear to tackle missions and combat arenas together, or face off in competitive play.

The Playmation Marvel’s Avengers Starter Pack will have a suggested retail price of $119.99 and will launch in October 2015 in the United States and Canada at mass and specialty retailers, select Disney Store locations and DisneyStore.com, and will be available for pre-order starting July 7.

Star Wars and Disney Frozen systems are currently in development for 2016 and 2017, respectively. Each will use a range of technologies to create a system based on the different ways that kids play and experience their favorite stories and characters from that franchise.

For more information, visit www.playmation.com.

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Movie News

Transformers Universe Adds Two More Writers

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The Transformers universe writers room has added two female scribes with Christina Hodson and Lindsey Beer, which will help balance out all the testosterone.

Deadline reports the pair have joined plans to create a shared Transformers universe as Hodson and Beer will help come up with ideas for Transformers sequels, prequels and spinoffs under the supervision of Akiva Goldsman.

They join Robert Kirkman, Art Marcum, Matt Holloway, Zak Penn, Jeff Pinkner, Andrew Barrer and Gabriel Ferrari.

Christina Hodson is known for Shut In, which stars Naomi Watts, and she wrote a version of The Fugitive. Lindsey Beer wrote the new Short Circuit and is writing a reimagined adaptation of Wizard of Oz.

Previously mentioned details for the planned Transformers shared universe mentioned the next live-action movie will be directed by Michael Bay and also that an animated origin Cybertron movie is in the works.

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Movie News

Jurassic World Extended Synopsis & Production Notes Released


JURASSIC WORLD TRAILER
 

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Universal released detail information about Jurassic World in the form of production notes which includes a detailed and extended plot synopsis, information on the locations and cast, comments from Steven Spielberg, Colin Trevorrow, Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard and more.

(Warning: Spoilers follow)

 

Can you imagine what a dinosaur looks like, moves like or sounds like without thinking of Jurassic Park?

It isn’t just a movie. It’s a memory shared by all of us.

It defined the colossal summer blockbuster, a moviegoing event of a lifetime that provided us some of the most lasting, iconic sights and sounds of cinema.

It gave you the feeling that the first day of summer had arrived.

It pioneered advancements in visual effects that made you believe dinosaurs roamed the Earth again.

Mixing plausible science with breathtaking imagination, it told a cautionary tale about what could result from messing with the natural order.

It left your eyes wide, your jaw open and your heart racing.

Jurassic Park answered the question of how much story, how much fun and how much spectacle could fit into one perfect summer motion picture.

Now, the story of STEVEN SPIELBERG’s original comes full circle as the park that was only a promise comes to life.

Welcome to Jurassic World.

Twenty-two years ago, Dr. John Hammond had a dream: a theme park where visitors from all over the world could experience the thrill and awe of witnessing actual dinosaurs.

Now, his dream has finally become a reality.

Welcome to Jurassic World, a fully operational luxury resort where tens of thousands of guests explore the wonder and brilliance of Earth’s most magnificent living prehistoric marvels and interact up close with them every day.

Situated on an island off the coast of Costa Rica and constructed around a bustling Main Street, Jurassic World is a state-of-the-art wonder full of astonishing attractions.

Kids ride gentle mini Triceratops in the petting zoo, crowds cheer as the aquatic Mosasaurus leaps from a performance pool to snatch a great white shark dangled as a snack, and families gaze with fascination as dinosaurs of every shape and size roam again, all displayed and safely contained for the guests’ amusement.

Overseeing every corner of Jurassic World is driven careerist Claire (BRYCE DALLAS HOWARD of The Help), who finds herself unexpectedly saddled with the arrival of her nephews, Zach, 16 (NICK ROBINSON of TV’s Melissa & Joey), and Gray, 11 (TY SIMPKINS of Insidious series). Although they’ve been shipped off by their mom, Karen (JUDY GREER of Ant-Man), to spend a few days at Jurassic World, Claire has no time for the distraction of two visiting kids and loads them down with passes, sending them off to explore the park.

The park’s miraculous animals are created by Dr. Henry Wu (BD WONG of Jurassic Park), a geneticist who once worked for InGen, the company behind Hammond’s first park, and now for the larger-than-life billionaire benefactor of Jurassic World, Simon Masrani (IRRFAN KHAN of Life of Pi). Because the commercial prosperity of the park demands new innovations every year to keep guests returning, Dr. Wu is pushed beyond the bounds of ethical science, manipulating genetics to engineer a genetically modified dinosaur that never walked the Earth before, and whose abilities remain undiscovered.

The most secretive new breed developed by Dr. Wu and yet to be debuted in the park is the massive and mysterious Indominus rex. Raised in isolation after devouring its only sibling, the Indominus rex, whose genetic makeup has been classified, is reaching maturity. To help assess the creature and the security of its containment, Claire visits Owen (CHRIS PRATT of Guardians of the Galaxy), an ex-military expert in animal behavior working at a secluded research base on the periphery of the main park. Owen is years into a training study with a pack of aggressive Velociraptors, over whom he’s established an alpha relationship that balances the animals precariously between reluctant obedience and predatory revolt.

When the Indominus rex—whose capacities for savagery and intelligence are unknown—stages an escape and disappears within the depths of the jungle, every creature in Jurassic World, both dinosaur and human, is threatened. For Claire, the lives that matter most are those of her nephews, who have ventured off course in a gyrosphere vehicle that allows 360-degree visibility of the world all around them. Now, Owen and Claire join the hunt for the boys as order inside the park turns to mayhem and guests turn into prey. Dinosaurs escape into the open, the skies and the water to engage in an all-out war for survival, and no corner within the world’s greatest theme park is safe anymore. Joining Jurassic World’s director, COLIN TREVORROW (Safety Not Guaranteed)—who was handpicked by Spielberg to take the Jurassic mantle—in this vast undertaking is a phenomenal behind-the-scenes team. The crew is led by director of photography JOHN SCHWARTZMAN (Seabiscuit, The Amazing Spider-Man), production designer EDWARD VERREAUX (X-Men: The Last Stand, Monster House), editor KEVIN STITT (X-Men, Cloverfield), costume designer DANIEL ORLANDI (The Da Vinci Code, Saving Mr. Banks) and Academy Award®-winning composer MICHAEL GIACCHINO (Star Trek Into Darkness, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes).

The epic action-adventure is produced by five-time Oscar® nominee FRANK MARSHALL (the Back to the Future trilogy, the Indiana Jones and Bourne franchises), PATRICK CROWLEY (the Bourne series, Eight Below), and it is based on characters created by MICHAEL CRICHTON (Jurassic Park series, television’s ER). Jurassic World’s story is by RICK JAFFA & AMANDA SILVER (Rise of the Planet of the Apes), and its screenplay is by Jaffa & Silver and DEREK CONNOLLY (Safety Not Guaranteed) & Trevorrow.

The film’s executive producers are Spielberg and THOMAS TULL (Godzilla, upcoming Warcraft).

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ABOUT THE PRODUCTION

 

From Dream to Reality:

 

Jurassic World Is Born

A narrative successor to three-time Oscar® winner Steven Spielberg’s beloved original classic Jurassic Park, Jurassic World takes place 22 years after the fateful events on Isla Nublar. Jurassic World is the world’s first truly international theme park, one that seamlessly combines the wonders of science and history with the creature comforts and luxury that international travelers have come to expect. And it all began with an idea from the brilliant mind of Dr. Michael Crichton.

Originally released in 1993, Spielberg’s Jurassic Park provided moviegoers with a film that connected with global audiences of all ages and has since become an indelible part of their cultural collective memory. Based on Crichton’s blend of science fiction and boundless imagination, the film left audiences breathless and asking the question: “Could this actually happen?”

Spielberg explains that it was never his or his fellow filmmakers’ intention to revolutionalize moviemaking. They simply wanted to do justice to Crichton’s phenomenal tale. The director says: “It’s not up to me to decide what a benchmark is. I just keep trying to tell stories. It’s up to other people to figure out whether your stories are successfully told or not, but I know that technologically it was a benchmark for the entire industry. Here were characters that were digitally created on a computer that looked completely authentic in any form of lighting or even atmospheric condition. We even had the digital T. rex in rain.”

After the subsequent films in the series—1997’s The Lost World: Jurassic Park and 2001’s Jurassic Park III—Spielberg admits he simply became busy with a multitude of other projects. Fortunately for fans of the beloved series, ideas for this world were simply dormant, not forgotten. Spielberg shares: “A lot of people that I bump into whom I’d never met before would remind me by simply asking, ‘When is the next Jurassic Park coming out?’ That accumulated after a while, and I started to put some thought into it.”

The encouragement of many fans began to spark ideas in Spielberg, and he started to take meetings with storytellers he respected to figure out how a park conceptualized more than two decades ago would finally come to life. He shares what this project means: “Jurassic World is almost like seeing Jurassic Park come true. We wanted to fulfill this dream in Jurassic World: to have a truly working theme park that is devoted to this miracle of creating dinosaurs from DNA. This is the realization of Michael Crichton’s dream, which then transferred to John Hammond’s dream. This, hopefully, becomes the dream that the audiences have always wanted to see.”

On board to produce the next installment was frequent Spielberg collaborator Frank Marshall, whose more than 70 credits include some of the most successful and enduring films of all time—from Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom to the Back to the Future trilogy and The Color Purple to The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.

Marshall was thrilled with the notion of venturing back through Isla Nublar’s legendary gates. He reflects: “Jurassic Park is an iconic film and people continue to love dinosaurs, so it was an exciting idea to make another one. It’s taken this long for the right idea to materialize, and Steven’s idea of having the fully realized theme park was the anchor and key to this story. It will have all been worth the wait.” Brought on to help shepherd the epic film was seasoned producer Patrick

Crowley, who has partnered with Marshall since the first film in the Bourne series. Similarly, the veteran producer sensed a readiness to revisit Jurassic Park by those who missed the classic Amblin style of filmmaking. “I don’t think audiences would have the chance to appreciate what had been done in the first and subsequent films had a next installment come out in, say, 2005,” reflects Crowley. “In the interim, a new generation of moviegoers has established this fascination and obsession with movies from the time when the first film was released. In that absence, a whole new crop of filmmakers has emerged who are truly intrigued and passionate about this kind of cinema.” While countless directors were interested in relaunching one of the most successful and popular franchises in movie history, Spielberg, Marshall and Crowley searched for some time for a creative talent who could honor the spirit and legacy of the franchise and propel it forward creatively.

They found their successor in newcomer Colin Trevorrow. A pioneer of the online short film, Trevorrow’s first feature, 2012’s critically lauded Safety Not Guaranteed, was nominated for multiple awards, including the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival, and won an Independent Spirit Award. His work caught the eye of Spielberg and Marshall, who felt his fresh and decisive perspective—rooted in character but delivering in speculative thematics—made him worthy of carrying the torch.

The longtime filmmaking partners felt confident that Trevorrow could deliver the magic, thrills and wonder that moviegoers expect from a Jurassic movie and simultaneously infuse it with fresh perspective in the ongoing narrative. Spielberg explains his decision: “I had seen Safety Not Guaranteed and the very last scene was what convinced me that Colin was the right person to direct Jurassic World. I flew out of my seat when I saw the last scene of that movie. Frank showed me the film, and that’s when I knew that if Colin was good in the meeting, he was going to get the job. He was completely enthusiastic, both as a filmmaker and as a fan, but also had a story to tell. He didn’t just come in and say, ‘I’d like to render my services directing the fourth installment.’”

“When we were looking for a director, it was of huge importance to Steven to find a great storyteller and we found that in Colin,” continues Marshall. “What we also discovered was that Colin was deeply steeped in Jurassic Park and would bring that sense of childlike wonder to the film.”

Having come of age in an age-group that grew up watching Amblin films, Trevorrow acknowledges that his perspective as a director is undeniably influenced by Spielberg: “A part of what drives me is the notion that I’m representing a generation of people who grew up on Steven’s films and want to see these types of stories continue to be told.”

In that spirit, Trevorrow’s objective was to deliver the perfect balance of wideeyed wonder and seat-gripping thrills that moviegoers expect from a Jurassic film, while introducing new characters and a story line full of ideas worthy of another chapter. “We know we don’t want another film of people just running from dinosaurs and screaming; that’s been done before and done very well,” he says. “I felt that what the audience wants, and I know what Steven wants, is to take this brilliant core concept and see where else we can go with it—to expand and open it up, while taking audiences back to a familiar place.”

Any skepticism regarding the young director’s ability to handle a film of this magnitude was quickly put at ease, reassures Crowley. “When I first looked at Colin’s production résumé, there wasn’t anything that was even close in scale and scope to what we were attempting,” he offers. “Still, from the beginning he exhibited real characteristics of leadership and had that inherent decisiveness required. His comments and observations were wise, certainly far beyond his experience and years, and it was clear early on that he had what it takes.”

Trevorrow and his writing partner, Derek Connolly, aimed to deliver a strong sense of character, scope and intrigue, while answering the most important questions for audiences. Reveals the director: “The questions for us were, ‘Why would there be another installment? What’s a story that we can tell and characters that we can introduce that make all of this worthwhile?’”

Connolly continues that they were very cognizant of the difficult narrative journey ahead: “The magic of Jurassic Park was in the tone of the characters and the bouts of humor, horror and science. We wanted to infuse those threads and that tone into the script.”

As writing partners, Trevorrow and Connolly’s perspectives complement each other, and their sensibilities worked perfectly to create the unique tone and pitch essential for the long-awaited next chapter in the Jurassic series. “The combination of my sense of humor and Colin’s strong sense of story helped shape our shared overall goal for the movie,” explains Connolly. “We were able to create a unique tone that, on our own, we might not possess but one that works when we come together.”

The once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to collaborate with one of the greatest filmmakers in the history of cinema was not lost on Trevorrow. “For me, I can’t even pretend that I’m not a student throughout this process,” he gives. “I know that I can make a film that is going to honor what Steven did, but I know I’m essentially getting a free master class in both filmmaking and in Jurassic Park.”

The director acknowledges that he found a kindred spirit in Spielberg: “Steven and I both have a lot of enthusiasm for what we’re working on, and to have two people of different generations geeking out on the same stuff has been a thrill for me. The moments where we’re actually able to create together and build new ideas, these are the things that I couldn’t have anticipated when I was younger. As a creative person, that is something that can’t be matched.”

Trevorrow’s hope for Jurassic World is a simple one: to re-create the magic that will harken audiences back to how he felt the first time he saw the movie. “I have a very specific memory of Jurassic Park coming out on the last day of school, and there’s a feeling that goes along with that,” he shares. “When everything is behind you, everything is ahead of you and you have that moment of being alone in a movie theater and being transported to where Jurassic Park takes you.”

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Strength of Character:

 

Casting Jurassic World

 

For all of the wonder of the Jurassic movies, the characters have provided personality to a story where science has made it possible for dinosaurs to walk the Earth again. Beyond the wide-eyed thrills, we are introduced to multidimensional characters with whom we share an emotional connection. Offers Crowley: “An important aspect of all of the Jurassic films is the strength of the characters. They are essentially what drives the storytelling.”

In this spirit, Trevorrow sought the ideal troupe of actors to bring these characters to life. “Considering all the things a movie like this needs to do, to be able to find people who truly embody these characters and make us love them and feel like we know them was so important,” explains Trevorrow. “When you’re dealing with dinosaurs running around and eating people, it’s really important that you care about these people.”

The hero of our story is a man who is as quick in repartee as he is in decisive action: Owen is a military veteran who respects the precarious place of humans in the natural order and now works at a behavioral facility on the outskirts of Jurassic World. He operates outside the system but needs its backing to fund his raptor research, which places him in the uncomfortable position of working for the establishment while rebelling against it.

While Owen’s first date with Claire was actually their last, he still spars with her at every opportunity, relishing the moment when she needs his help in Jurassic World.

And Claire’s never needed it more than when a crisis erupts that she can’t solve with her immediate team. Drawn into unexpected service from his outlying facility, it’s up to Owen to step up before all hell breaks loose. He is the consummate adventurer—a classic hero in the rough—one who lives by his own wits, ingenuity and raw instinct.

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For the role, the filmmakers found their hero in comedic actor-turned-action star Chris Pratt, last seen as Star-Lord in the juggernaut Guardians of the Galaxy. Spielberg recounts his casting, dryly noting: “Safety wasn’t guaranteed in those days using Chris Pratt because he was on a very successful television series. Even though I thought he had the chops for this and Colin believed in him, it was a bit of a risk. Of course, when Guardians of the Galaxy came out, we all thought we were really smart even though we didn’t make it.” The filmmaker was impressed by Pratt’s on-screen test: “Chris is a wonderful actor and has a strong screen presence. He has a tremendous sense of humor and he’s a team player. He’s going to go all the way with his career.”

“Owen is strong, self-sufficient, adventurous and very capable, and audiences want to see a guy like that,” adds Crowley. “I didn’t know much more about Chris than what I had seen on television, and to see him emerge as this strong figure has been incredibly impressive. As he became Owen, we all looked at each other and knew he was that hero.”

A huge fan of Jurassic Park, Pratt, much like his director, vividly remembers seeing the original film in 1993 in his small-town theater. “I was 14 years old and was right at that age where I was impressionable. It blew my mind,” the performer notes.

“The science and imagination came together in this way that was full of suspense, beautiful imagery and great storytelling. It was like cinema was reinvented right in front of me, and it was then that I discovered how cool movies could be. I had complete Jurassic-mania and saw it twice that weekend. After that, I spent the next six months of my life running from imaginary dinosaurs.”

Pratt was drawn to Owen’s strength, character and decisiveness, and admits that he had to exercise restraint to quell his own comedic instincts during filming. “Owen is stoic, quick to act and without a single bit of goofiness, which for me is hard,” he says. “My natural instinct is to be a goofball, and it’s something I had to remind myself to quiet before every take.”

Still, right from the start, the gravitas of the project sunk in for Pratt. “The shoot began on an air base where airplanes took off during World War II,” he explains. “Bryce and I were both in our jungle-worn wardrobe with dirt on our faces, shooting on 65 mm, and you could hear the cameras rolling. We’re stepping on our marks looking at each other, and we could have been on the set of Casablanca. That’s when it became real for me and felt like a very big deal.”

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The Bryce of whom Pratt speaks is none other than acclaimed actor Bryce Dallas Howard, who has showcased her diverse talents in blockbusters from the Twilight series andSpider-Man 3 to more dramatic hits, including The Help and 50/50. She was brought aboard to portray Claire, the operations manager of Jurassic World, who strives to make every guest’s visit free of worry. When things run smoothly, it’s because of Claire; when they don’t, she’s held accountable. Deftly managing the needs of thousands of guests every day with a constant eye on the bottom line, it’s her job to make sure that the park remains exciting to sophisticated parkgoers who have seen it all.

Claire watches Jurassic World from the sanitized safety of a control booth, where she monitors all activity (human and dinosaur alike) from a safe distance. Indeed, she views the dinosaurs strictly as “assets” and has lost sight of the wonder and power they exhibit. It is only when things fall apart that Claire experiences the park from a completely different perspective: as the hunted.

Beyond the allure of being a part of the beloved franchise, the actress appreciated the caliber of storytelling and the strong character she was tasked to portray. Relays Howard: “It is fantastic that Colin created this multifaceted, three-dimensional female character who goes through this very emotional journey within the greater context of a giant, effects-driven dinosaur movie. At the end of the day, it’s a good story well-told.” When we first meet Claire, her personal life has taken a backseat to her responsibilities at the park and the pressures—not to mention the questionable ethical decisions—that come along with them. “Claire is responsible for the entire park and understands that at the end of the day everything needs to add up, and there are some difficult decisions and realities within that,” shares the performer. “Her journey becomes about finding her own humanity and her ability to be open and not fixated on making everything work in order to make a profit.”

Of his leading lady, Trevorrow commends: “Bryce is one of our best actors that we have. She created a woman who starts off just on the borderline of being unlikable. She takes you on the journey, and by the time you get to the end…the ending is hers. I’m so proud of what she does at the end of this movie. If you didn’t have an actor who could make you believe everything that was happening, it just wouldn’t work; it would all feel silly. Bryce is just extraordinary.”

When the park’s newly developed dinosaur begins exhibiting potentially threatening intelligence, well beyond expectations, Claire is forced to seek outside assistance and reluctantly pays a visit to behavioral specialist Owen, with whom she shares a bit of history.

The chemistry between these two seemingly opposite, headstrong characters is undeniable. Explains Pratt: “We know that something happened between these two on a date, and Owen enjoys poking fun at her because she’s wound so tight. There’s obviously an attraction between the two of them, and that fuels this conflict that’s constantly between them in these crazy circumstances.”

Howard responds to the romantic undertones and how they propelled the story line, something new to the world of the Jurassic franchise. “One of the many great things about this story is that, in the context of the chaos that has broken out in the park, they realize that they need each other and go on this journey to save her nephews, save the park and ultimately themselves,” the actress shares. “The romantic undercurrent feels very unique for a Jurassic film, and I appreciated that.”

Although both actors had a general idea of the physical demands their roles would require, nothing could prepare Howard for the ultimate challenge of running through the muddy jungle…in heels. “I’ll never forget the first day of shooting in the jungle as I stood there looking at the terrain, which was covered in mud, vines and stones. I looked down at my high heels and all I could do was pray,” she laughs. “But now, it’s something I can add to the special skills listed on my résumé: running in the jungle in heels.”

For his part, Pratt felt that his work experience in physical comedy prepared him for the stunt-heavy action sequences, supervised under the watchful eyes of stunt coordinator CHRIS O’HARA (The Avengers) and stunt rigging coordinator RANDY BECKMAN (Ted 2). “There was a lot of running, jumping, leaping, diving, rolling, punching…a lot of action-hero moments,” Pratt provides. “On Parks and Rec, I’m diving over counters, crashing into cars, falling down stairs on roller skates—so all that stuff comes easy to me.” He pauses, slyly: “I’m secretly a stuntman trapped in an actor’s body.”

In classic Spielberg fashion, audiences first experience the magic and wonder of Jurassic World from the perspective of a child. As the story begins, Claire is visited by her sister’s boys, Gray and Zach, who have been shipped away while their parents negotiate their impending divorce. Gray is an 11-year-old boy full of limitless curiosity and energy who is wide-eyed with excitement from the minute he boards the ferry for Isla Nublar. Anxious to explore every inch of Jurassic World and acutely perceptive of details in the world around him, he is awed by seeing dinosaurs that he’d only read about in books come to life. Gray is on the adventure of his young lifetime, and his natural inquisitiveness—and some pressure from his big bother—drive him to go beyond the boundaries of what his parents would ok.

“The great thing about the manner in which the story is told is that we enter Jurassic World through the eyes of Gray,” says Marshall. “That was a key element for Colin. He wanted us to see the wonder of the park first, and to see it through the eyes of our two young characters is the perfect introduction.”

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For the role of Gray, filmmakers cast young actor Ty Simpkins, familiar to audiences from his work co-starring alongside Robert Downey Jr. in Iron Man 3 and in director James Wan’s Insidious series. Although Simpkins was very young when first viewing Jurassic Park, the young performer recalls the lasting impression it made on him: “I was three when I first saw it, and although I don’t remember watching it for the first time, I remember that I became obsessed with dinosaurs. It has always been one of my favorite movies, and I still can’t believe I am a part of this. ”

Gray’s older brother, Zach, is as disaffected by the wonders of Jurassic World as his brother is in awe of them. Roaming the unbelievable attractions with his face cast down toward his smartphone, Zach slowly starts to admit that the park is actually pretty cool. Although Zach and Gray have a chaperone assigned to them by their Aunt Claire, they must stay mindful of any prehistoric threats that await them in the lush jungle directly ahead.

For the role of the disaffected 16-year-old, Trevorrow turned to Nick Robinson, an up-and-coming actor whom he’d seen in the independent film The Kings of Summer. During casting, Robinson was brought in with potential co-star Simpkins to read various scenes, some of which hinted at the type of unusual methods that the role would require.

“We had to do a thing where we were scared of something that wasn’t there, which was good practice for what we ended up doing a lot,” says Robinson. “Ty killed that audition, and I felt like I had to follow up his masterful work there.”

Producer Crowley offers praise for the young man: “When Nick first came in, we thought of him as a Montgomery Clift-type, and there’s no doubt that in another couple of years he’ll be that heartthrob. He is a consummate actor and really underplays the role. His performance is riveting.”

When chaos erupts on Isla Nublar—and it always does—the brothers are forced to rely on each other to survive, something that breaks down the walls between them and brings them closer together.

The quick off-screen bond between Simpkins and Robinson played into their performance and mirrored that of their on-screen relationship. “Nick and Ty have a true brotherly dynamic with one another,” reveals Howard. “Nick has two younger brothers who are Ty’s age and Ty has an older brother, so they instantly became like real brothers. It was beautiful to watch, and they brought so much honesty to those characters and to that dynamic.”

When production commenced, Robinson and Simpkins looked to Trevorrow to guide them through the emotional story line of their evolving relationship, as well as the intense technical aspects required to complement the visual effects. “It was Colin’s top priority to make sure we hit all the emotional beats of the scene while also hitting our technical marks,” says Robinson, “so he could later then worry about adding the crazy dinosaur that was trying to kill us.”

The sole character of the storied franchise who is returning to the series is actor BD Wong, who reprises his role as Dr. Hammond’s lead geneticist, Dr. Wu. First introduced in Jurassic Park, Dr. Wu is the lead scientist responsible for bridging the gap between the past and present. Trevorrow explains the need for the researcher’s presence in Jurassic World: “We wanted to bring back a character from the original, and although he spent just a couple of minutes in the first film, Dr. Wu is much more fleshed out in the book and is a crucial component in the history. Having so much genetics and science in this film, it was important to have a character who’s informed of everything that’s gone on before this moment…and can pull us back into that world.”

It was Dr. Wu who ingeniously discovered the process of successfully revitalizing dinosaurs whose DNA was found in amber-trapped mosquitos. In the 22 years since the disastrous events on Isla Nublar, Dr. Wu has since continued his groundbreaking work with the support of Simon Masrani, Jurassic World’s generous—and quite complex— benefactor. Pushed by his own scientific curiosity and the demands from the park’s executors for new sensations, Wu’s latest creation has moved away from the wonders of rebirth to the uncharted realms of genetic modification.

Thrilled to revisit the role, Wong was intrigued by Dr. Wu’s progressive fall into more questionable ethical practices. Still, the actor admits that he understood his character’s mindset: “Dr. Wu feels that he deserves to be rich and famous because he is the mastermind or the locomotive that is driving that train. He is, however, a little bit naïve as to the consequences of what can happen as a result of this brilliant creative engineering and groundbreaking territory he finds himself in.”

As Jurassic World is the first truly international theme park, it was of paramount importance to Trevorrow and the producers that the cast be a reflection of that ideal. “It was important for the movie to have an international flavor to mirror that of the theme park,” gives Marshall. “We have a truly international cast and that has been really exciting.”

Entrusted with the task of fulfilling Dr. Hammond’s legacy to create a safe haven where humans and dinosaurs can coexist, larger-than-life billionaire Masrani is Jurassic World’s flashy benefactor and public showman. Despite the warnings of Owen, Masrani is more interested in dazzling his park’s guests by engineering a dinosaur with evermore-intimidating features than he is with the worrisome details of asset containment.

For the role of the charismatic entrepreneur, filmmakers looked to Irrfan Khan. A celebrated performer in his home country of India, Khan is known to international audiences for his riveting work in Ang Lee’s Life of Pi and Danny Boyle’s Slumdog Millionaire.

When asked why he was interested in the role of Masrani, Khan admits that he was drawn to the billionaire’s spirit and passion: “Masrani is an entrepreneur, and he has a unique sense of morality. Jurassic World is not a place just to earn money; he nurtured John Hammond’s dream and truly wants to educate the common man through entertainment.”

Known for his work in such films as Europe’s surprise blockbuster The Intouchables and the juggernaut X-Men: Days of Future Past, French actor OMAR SY was brought aboard to join the cast in the role of Barry, Owen’s lead dinosaur handler and partner in their remarkable behavioral study. Just as wary of their subjects’ natural ferocity as he is of InGen’s twisted beliefs, Barry is the first to challenge InGen when he catches wind of the company’s nefarious plans.

Another huge fan of the franchise, Sy was thrilled to be asked to join the production and was up for what was sure to be a memorable experience. “My first day of filming was in Hawaii, where I rode through the jungle at night on an ATV. I couldn’t believe I was there,” the actor reflects. “I realized I was in Jurassic World, like a dream from my childhood come true.” The player who is perhaps most interested in the progress of Owen and Barry’s behavioral study with Velociraptors—and its potential use and application in warfare—is none other than InGen’s Hoskins, a skunkworks agent waiting for the right moment to appropriate Owen’s research. He recognizes the animals of Jurassic World not as sentient creatures, but as assets with untapped potential that would deliver serious profit.

The only thing standing in the way of his single-minded greed is the ethical will of Owen and his team. Seasoned actor VINCENT D’ONOFRIO, a performer of screens big and small, from Men in Black to TV’s Law & Order: Criminal Intent, was asked to play Hoskins.

While it might seem easy to label Hoskins the antagonist in the film, D’Onofrio doesn’t view his character in such black-and-white terms. “It’s hard to say you’re the villain in a dinosaur movie because usually the dinosaurs are the villains,” he plainly states. “Hoskins is essentially a security contractor whose perspective is that these animals are worth using instead of losing human lives. An animal is not computer-programmed and can’t be hacked. To be able to hook an apparatus on them and give them commands would be good for a multitude of uses…and a better alternative to risking human lives.”

Pratt offers yet another perspective: “The real villain is progress, and Hoskins is really an agent of progress. A lot of scientific research is funded for military application and is simply the natural order of that world.”

Marshall adds that it took an actor of D’Onofrio’s caliber not to make Hoskins a one-dimensional villain: “Hoskins represents something that is real, which is people who want to take scientific innovations and use them for darker purposes. Vincent is a wonderful actor, and it was fun to see him explore that side.”

Last but not least of the principal players is Lowery. A technical engineer whose mess of a workstation and smart-ass attitude belie a respect for the creatures he helps oversee, Lowery is Claire’s trusted lieutenant with electronic eyes on every corner of Jurassic World. To portray the role, Trevorrow turned to friend and previous collaborator JAKE JOHNSON (TV’s New Girl, Let’s Be Cops), who appeared in the director’s Safety Not Guaranteed. Trevorrow looked to Johnson to infuse Lowery with the pitch perfect amount of comedy and provide the type of levity that his Jurassic Park counterpart, the brilliant Samuel L. Jackson, delivered.

Johnson understood the value of delivering some laughs into the intense actionadventure film. He says: “Colin wanted actors for certain roles to have an option for a bit of humor and lightness. If there was a moment we could improvise and try to find a laugh, we took it.”

Alongside his fellow performers, the opportunity to be a part of the Jurassic legacy was not lost on Johnson: “Young people will see this the way we saw Jurassic Park, and for them it will be that awe-inspiring, jaw-dropping experience it was for us.

The opportunity to be a part of something like this doesn’t come around very often, and I feel very lucky.”

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The Park Is Open:

Design and Locations

 

Operational and established as the world’s first international theme park, Jurassic World is the promise of the original park gloriously fulfilled. The park features a gleaming new Visitors’ Center that houses fully interactive scientific displays, a bustling commercial Main Street and boardwalk, an aquatic amphitheater where trained breeds perform, a soaring aviary and a petting zoo where young children can have the tactile experiences humans never thought possible. Dinosaurs of every shape, size and variety fill the numerous exhibits and attractions inside the park that are sure to amaze and delight its thousands of daily visitors. A shining monorail even connects all the attractions of the park, gliding gracefully throughout Jurassic World.

Trevorrow and his creative team set out to create a magical world that felt more tangible than fantastical. “It was important to us to create a place that could exist now, not a sci-fi imagining set in the future,” the director shares. “We wanted to create a very real, visceral park experience where you’re able to get up close with the dinosaurs and step into their world, everything John Hammond dreamed of.”

Veteran production designer Edward Verreaux was selected to bring the vision of Jurassic World to life. Beginning his career with Spielberg as an illustrator on Raiders of the Lost Ark andE.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, Verreaux has served as production designer on massive blockbusters such as X-Men: The Last Stand and Rush Hour 3. His long relationship with the Jurassic franchise—he served as an illustrator for production designer Rick Carter on the original film, prior to stepping into the role himself on Jurassic Park 3—made him the perfect choice to create the template for the next installment and the modern vision.

Verreaux was enthusiastic about the opportunity to infuse the franchise with a modern aesthetic, while simultaneously honoring the legacy of the first film. “We’re getting to reinvent it for the next generation,” he says. “We’re 24 years out from having begun on Jurassic Park, so it’s a whole new ball game. We are, however, making reference to the previous films because they set the standard for the overall aesthetic of Jurassic World.”

Trevorrow was excited to have the opportunity to work with Verreaux and his creative team to help carry out his cinematic vision. “I am so privileged to be able to work with the best artists and innovators in the business who can bring these ideas to life,” the director commends. “The look of this film will leave an indelible mark and separate it from the other films to help push it forward.”

The majestic landscapes seen in Jurassic Park have become a part of moviegoers’ cultural DNA, successfully creating iconic images of massive creatures again roaming the Earth. For the production team, returning to Isla Nublar meant returning to Hawaii, where the green environment and majestic mountaintops substituted for Costa Rica. The crew discovered that the majority of the original locations were relatively untouched, affording the ability to seamlessly step back into that visual world, without extensive CGI to replicate settings.

“We knew we had to go to a green environment in order to do the jungle work, and almost all the other Jurassic films were shot in Hawaii,” explains Crowley. “Beyond that, we wanted to take people visually to places that many had not been to on their own.

There are places in Hawaii that are so dark and deep it looks like Tarzan lives there.”

For Marshall, returning to Hawaii decades later felt like stepping back in time. “It was magical to be in some of the same locations,” he says. “Being in that valley surrounded by those iconic mountaintops really brought it home that we’re in Jurassic World.”

Production began on April 14, 2014, on the island of Oahu at the Honolulu Zoo, which was magically transformed into Jurassic World’s petting zoo. Paying homage to the sacred lands on which the company would be filming while in Hawaii—and to garner some aloha spirit for the complicated shoot ahead—the crew participated in a spiritual blessing ceremony on the first day of principal photography. Crowley shares why they were adamant to participate in this ritual: “When filming Jurassic Park, there was a hurricane that destroyed all the sets, and we wanted to make every effort to make sure that didn’t happen again. The cast and crew were very respectful. It’s easy to assume that a crew of movie people who have worked all over the world would be jaded, but they really listened to the thoughtful words and took them to heart.”

With a total of 33 days of filming on the islands of Oahu and Kauai, the team set out to utilize the natural landscape to provide the appropriate scale and scope needed for Jurassic World. Returning to film at Kualoa Ranch on Oahu, Verreaux and his workers built a full-scale dinosaur paddock, which was constructed to house the park’s new genetically modified dinosaur. Kualoa Ranch also provided the backdrop for multiple exterior locations, including Owen’s bungalow, Masrani’s mountainside helipad and the majestic Gyrosphere Valley, where parkgoers can board a two-person gyrosphere and roam the land with various herds of gentle giants. Together, the various bits and pieces cut together created the full scope and magic of Jurassic World.

For its part, the gyrosphere—designed by supervising art director DOUG MEERDINK (Cloverfield) and his team, including RON MENDELL (Iron Man series)— is a spectacular, two-person orb that powers guests through, and immerses them in, the wonders of Jurassic World. Once securely inside, they may move freely throughout Gyrosphere Valley to experience the park’s stunning, unobstructed views and its onceextinct creatures…all at their own pace. As they travel through the valley, guests may use the in-sphere monitor to help identify the dinosaurs—ranging from the mighty Apatosaurus and Stegosaurus to the fascinating Parasaurolophus and Triceratops—that they see all around.

The epicenter of Isla Nublar’s $1.2 billion Jurassic World is Main Street, a bustling commercial stretch that offers various shopping, dining and entertainment options for parkgoers to enjoy. For those seeking mementos and keepsakes from their trip, Jurassic Traders has every toy and piece of merchandise the curious tourist could ever want. Up for a movie while on site? Guests can take in the spectacular sights and sounds of the film Pterosauria, which is now showing at Main Street’s IMAX theater.

It was important to Trevorrow and the producers that Jurassic World felt like a real destination, replete with actual stores one might find at a destination location such as Universal Studios Hollywood. To make it all happen, on Main Street and the boardwalk, guests staying at the Hilton Isla Nublar have a multitude of dining options that include sushi at Nobu, American cuisine at Winston’s (a clever nod to the legendary specialeffects wizard Stan Winston) or tacos and margaritas at Jimmy Buffett’s Margaritaville. For a little post-dining fun, parkgoers can kick up their heels at the nightclub or enjoy a taste of home as they grab a cappuccino at Isla Nublar’s Starbucks.

Verreaux and his team were put to the task of conceptualizing and creating a living and breathing theme park in a short period of time, an extraordinary undertaking.

“Ed was so important in pulling all of the concept and design for this theme park together,” lauds Crowley. “Unlike parks like Universal and Six Flags, which are developed over years, Ed had a couple of months to pull Jurassic World together. His team truly impressed us all.”

Bringing the elaborate vision of Main Street to life was no easy task, as filmmakers wanted to build as much as possible practically without sacrificing the scale and scope. After an extensive search for a locale that met the many criteria that came along with the massive build, the production team began construction at an abandoned Six Flags theme park outside of New Orleans. Although unable to use the infrastructure of the theme park due to the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, the team utilized the massive parking lot—roughly the size of six football fields—and built from scratch. While the shooting crew filmed in Hawaii, a construction crew of up to 400 craftspersons was hard at work prepping the enormous sets in New Orleans. Throughout the build, and as the company’s arrival approached, Verreaux provided the filmmakers with progress reports. He recounts: “Main Street was being built while everyone was filming in Hawaii, so Colin didn’t get to see it until days prior to filming there. I sent him pictures and flew back and forth to show him all of the colors and fabrics to make sure that he was in agreement with the direction that we were going.”

During the final weeks leading up to filming on Main Street, various departments were hard at work dressing, prepping, lighting and rigging the set for the extensive sequences. The production crew arrived from Hawaii on a Saturday and began filming on Main Street the following Monday. Trevorrow recalls his initial reaction upon walking onto the set: “The first time I stepped onto Main Street I definitely got emotional. I was not alone in taking a moment to breathe it all in because we rarely get to see a world of this size brought to life in this way. When you walked on the set, it truly felt real.”

Marshall echoes those sentiments. “When we first saw it fully dressed with 800 extras enjoying everything Main Street had to offer, as if it was a real theme park, it was pretty amazing.”

For his part, Crowley was flabbergasted by the final product and the endless attention to detail. He comments: “We had it all: park rangers and employees who worked in the various stores and restaurants—all wore custom-made Jurassic World uniforms—and props and various merchandise that would be found at a theme park of this caliber. From the dinosaur strollers, plush toys and hand puppets, everyone did a tremendous job at making you feel that you were at a real working theme park.” The process of conceptualizing, building and finally filming on Main Street was not lost on Verreaux. “With something of this scale, there is a long design curve and a million decisions to make. You read the script, have discussions with the director, develop with concepts and illustrations, develop the set and build it. The company then takes it, dresses and lights it and then all of a sudden there are 800 extras walking around looking like real tourists. They, of course, hadn’t seen the set prior, so they’re thinking, ‘Oh my god, look at this!’ and we’re getting the proper responses from them. All those moments and responses are really gratifying.”

Although the daily rainfall and the formidable mud that followed were a significant challenge in Hawaii, the team was particularly wary of filming in New Orleans in June. “During those first few weeks in New Orleans, we were shooting all exteriors on Main Street—with very few cover sets—which was nerve-wracking,” recalls Crowley. “When it rains here, it pours for hours on end…with extensive lightning. When the weather in Louisiana is bad, it’s biblical.”

While the team was hit with several significant rain and lightning storms that left Main Street flooded and dark, the weather ended up, for the most part, cooperating and the company moved onto filming at the raptor research arena. Set on the outskirts of Isla Nublar far from the gloss of the theme park, the arena houses Owen and his team while they conduct behavioral research with Velociraptors. A massive circular structure, the inside arena is a large open area where the raptors reside, while the animal handlers safely observe from the extensive overhead walkways. Heavily fortified chambers surround the perimeter, thus allowing Owen and his team to engage in close interaction with the highly dangerous, and extremely predatory, animals.

Also a practical build, the arena was crafted to completion by requiring minimal green screen and not utilizing faux set walls. When working at the arena, Pratt was blown away by the lengths the design team went into the integrity of the structure…without typical Hollywood trickery. “The raptor arena was built of steel and cement and was huge; it was no joke,” lauds the performer. “There is no doubt that it could, in practice, house dangerous animals for many years without breaking down. It was phenomenal.”

For the numerous and massive interior sets, the filmmakers needed a singular location with ample space, security and infrastructure, all of which they found at Big Easy Studios in New Orleans. Residing on a portion of NASA’s Michoud Assembly campus, which was left vacant after the cancellation of the space program, Big Easy’s expansive structures were converted to stages capable of housing a production of this size.

The six stages occupied by Jurassic World were in varying stages of construction—a virtual revolving door of sets were built, filmed or struck simultaneously.

Some of the sets built at Big Easy included the interior of the new Visitors’ Center, Dr. Wu’s genetics lab and the control room, all massive in their own right. Considering the ambitious nature of the project, the NASA campus turned out to serve as the perfect locale. “It seemed fitting that we’d make this film inside the hangars where they built the first rocket that took people to the moon,” Crowley dryly observes.

At the center of Main Street sits the Samsung Innovation Center, a towering structure that serves as an aesthetic beacon of the theme park. This new Visitors’ Center is a celebration of science and technology, where parkgoers can learn more about the revived prehistoric creatures that inhabit the island (as well as find a guest appearance by our old friend, Mr. DNA). The “edutainment” is varied: Activities include multiple kiosks with evolutionary facts that include high-tech elements where, with the touch of a button, a rotating, lifesize hologram appears, as well as a place where children can dig for dinosaur bones and unearth the next big discovery. The Visitors’ Center is a dazzling meld of technology, science and education, truly John Hammond’s vision realized.

Proudly watching over the spectacle stands a larger-than-life statue of Dr. Hammond, an homage to the man whose dreams made it all possible. “When you walk into the Visitors’ Center, you’ll see him on the far side of the rotunda looking off into the future, very hopefully,” explains Verreaux. “If you look closely, you’ll see that in his hand, he’s holding his cane…and in that cane is a piece of amber with a mosquito inside. We wanted to have something that brought people back to the memory of John Hammond, the creative genius behind all of this.”

The statue summons guests to continue their journey of discovery into the genetics lab, which offers a glimpse inside the inner workings of Dr. Wu’s mind and introduces us to his team of geneticists. In any of the lab’s five sections—which consist of 1) extraction, 2) sequencing, 3) assembly, 4) a hatchery and 5) a nursery—visitors can observe scientists and lab technicians through giant glass observational panels. At any given moment, one can witness DNA being extracted from amber-trapped mosquitos from around the world or get a peek inside the hatchery as a new dinosaur is welcomed to a time its ancestors could not have comprehended. Modern-day miracles happen every day at Jurassic World. Built in its entirety, the genetics lab reflects the sleek sophistication of InGen and the seemingly limitless technology utilized (and funding that is required).

In the control room, a removed and protected area restricted to the public, Claire and her team—including Lowery—watch over the park from within the highly secured, sanitized walls. The room is command central, and from there, each and every dinosaur creation and park guest alike is tracked and observed from a giant wall of monitors that capture real-time activity. Ever corner of the park is monitored.

The Control Room was designed to be as fully immersive as possible for the performers, who were allowed to use actual playback that was recorded throughout production, and which played back on the multitude of monitors. “In a lot of films, they put the image on in post, but they were actually playing everything back inside the control room during filming,” explains Johnson. “Colin wanted us to be able to watch things they’d actually shot to have the real image to react to.”

With the extensive array of moving parts necessitated by a production of this scale, collaboration between departments was paramount. Production designer Verreaux explains: “This is the kind of project that doesn’t happen in a vacuum and doesn’t happen just within any one department. Because of the scope and scale of this film, it requires the involvement and the collaboration of everybody on the project to pull something like this off. Everyone gave it their all.”

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Roam the Earth Again:

Science Meets Imagination

 

Young and old alike are drawn to the mysteries and wonder of the prehistoric creatures that ruled the Earth for 160 million years before they vanished and left only small traces of their existence behind. Crichton’s work, and the subsequent films, captured our collective intrigue and brilliantly blurred the line between science and fiction.

Jurassic Park was considered a cautionary tale of the dangers associated with scientific manipulation, a consistent theme of Crichton’s work. Although his writing is typically classified as science fiction, his core ideas were rooted in science. Reflects Trevorrow: “What fascinates me about Crichton’s work in general is his ability to take pretty complex new ideas in technology and science and not only make them relatable and feel human, but integrate them into the world that we live in now.”

In Jurassic World, the story begins more than two decades after the disastrous events on Isla Nublar threatened to quash Hammond’s dream forever. With more than 20,000 visitors a day, Jurassic World has changed the way humans view dinosaurs. Still, once believed only possible in our collective imagination, the novelty of their existence has faded, and the presence of dinosaurs back on Earth has become an accepted part of life.

The notion of dinosaur fatigue fascinated Trevorrow and spoke to society’s malaise, ever increasing in the age of burgeoning technology as we become less connected to the natural world. “In the film, the existence of dinosaurs and man on the same planet is not a new idea anymore, so we start in a place where teenagers going to Jurassic World are texting on their phones and not paying attention,” offers the director. “What we love about this is that we can throw you back into that fear and danger and remind you why you should be afraid and why you should pay attention.” Fan-favorite dinosaurs make a welcomed return in the film, although some display unexpected new traits. These dinosaurs, some of which have never been seen before in a Jurassic film, roam, swim and fly. During the writing process, Trevorrow was mindful of which species Jurassic fans wanted to return. “As someone who is a fan of these films, I don’t think I could wake up in the morning without bringing back certain dinosaurs, and not just for the sake of having them there. It’s important to me that dinosaurs like the T. rex are given the weight and the heroic qualities that they had in the first film. In my eyes, the T. rex was the hero of that movie; t

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Movie Trailers

Watch: Batman Unlimited: Monster Mayhem Trailer

Watch the trailer above for the latest WB animated movie Batman Unlimited: Monster Mayhem, which arrives on Blu-ray and DVD on August 18, 2015 and via Digital HD on August 4. 

Synopsis:

It’s Halloween night in Gotham City and Scarecrow, Clayface, Silver Banshee and Solomon Grundy have hit the streets to stir up trouble! Batman is on the trail of the city’s spookiest villains while, further complicating matters, the clown prince of crime himself, The Joker, is ruling over this mysterious crew of misfit criminals. It’s up to the Dark Knight to stop this gruesome gang before they unleash “digital laughter,” a computer virus that’s part of a diabolical plan to jeopardize all of Gotham City’s vital technology. Batman, Green Arrow, Cyborg, Nightwing and Red Robin must combine forces to battle these baddies and save the city.

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Movie Trailers

Watch: Extended Ant-Man Spot With New Footage

Check out new Ant-Man footage in a 1-minute spot above.

Ant-Man” has a July 17, 2015 release directed by Peyton Reed starring Michael Douglas as Hank Pym, Paul Rudd as Scott Lang, Evangeline Lilly as Hope Van Dyne and Corey Stoll as Darren Cross/Yellowjacket.

Synopsis:

The next evolution of the Marvel Cinematic Universe brings a founding member of The Avengers to the big screen for the first time with Marvel Studios’ “Ant-Man.” Armed with the astonishing ability to shrink in scale but increase in strength, master thief Scott Lang must embrace his inner-hero and help his mentor, Dr. Hank Pym, protect the secret behind his spectacular Ant-Man suit from a new generation of towering threats. Against seemingly insurmountable obstacles, Pym and Lang must plan and pull off a heist that will save the world.

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Movie Trailers

Watch: Pixar’s The Good Dinosaur Trailer

Check out the trailer above for the latest Disney Pixar animated movie The Good Dinosaur.

The Good Dinosaur has a November 25, 2015 release directed by Peter Sohn starring the voice talents of Judy Greer, Neil Patrick Harris, Bill Hader, Frances McDormand, John Lithgow, Lucas Neff, Estelle Yves and Adam Stedman.

Synopsis:

“The Good Dinosaur” asks the question: What if the asteroid that forever changed life on Earth missed the planet completely and giant dinosaurs never became extinct? Pixar Animation Studios takes you on an epic journey into the world of dinosaurs where an Apatosaurus named Arlo makes an unlikely human friend. While traveling through a harsh and mysterious landscape, Arlo learns the power of confronting his fears and discovers what he is truly capable of.

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Movie Trailers

Watch: Ted 2 Red-Band Trailer #2

A second Red-Band (mature) trailer has been released for Ted 2, which stars Mark Wahlberg and Seth MacFarlane.

Ted 2 has a June 26, 2015 release.

Synopsis:

Seth MacFarlane returns as writer, director and voice star of Ted 2, Universal and Media Rights Capital’s follow-up to the highest-grossing original R-rated comedy of all time.  Joined once again by star Mark Wahlberg and fellow Ted writers Alec Sulkin & Wellesley Wild, MacFarlane produces the live action/CG-animated comedy alongside Bluegrass Films’ Scott Stuber, as well as John Jacobs and Jason Clark.

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