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Very. Important. Pictures. |
07-09-01
news
War
of the Worlds Report...
War of the Worlds director Timothy Hines
and Producer Susan Goforth have returned from
the picturesque Bavarian town of Leavenworth, Washington,
where they photographed images of raging forest fires
to use in special effects compositing.
"Anyone who has read H.G. Wells' novel knows
that the story calls for many woodland settings in
flames sparked by alien fighting machine heat rays,"
declares Hines.
"Nature provided us with the opportunity to film real
fires at the right time. We would have spent mountains
of effort recreating what we captured, and it never
would have had the amazing force of the real thing."
Producer
Susan Goforth concurs, "I've never seen anything like
it in my life. There are just no words to describe
the experience of being so close to a curtain of fire
rising into the sky and stretching on for miles. Wafts
of heat constantly remind you of forces that are greater
than our own. Timothy was so excited. He kept moving
in closer and closer with the camera. I was very worried
as to how far we were pushing those boundaries. I
had to keep reminding Timothy that we didn't want
to announce that the principals of the new War of
the Worlds movie perished while filming forest fires."
On other fronts of War of the Worlds, the production
is gearing up for its October 15th start date of principle
photography. "The excitement is palpable," beams Timothy
Hines. "The city of Seattle and the surrounding towns
have been incredibly helpful in securing locations
that in many cases we had planned to do on soundstages.
No soundstage set can compare to the spectacle of
actually setting up hundreds of demolished cars and
trucks on real streets and setting them afire. Of
course the many mechanical effects and the devastation
that has to be added becomes a logistical challenge."
Susan
Goforth smiles, "Timothy prefers real settings to
stage sets. He's been pulling us in that direction
since the beginning. We are fortunate shooting in
the Northwest in that so many shopkeepers are willing
to let us break out their windows and make their establishments
look to be in ruins."
Foundation Imaging, who provided effects for
Star Trek Voyager and the upcoming Enterprise
series, just provided Pendragon Pictures with some
of the advanced design work and effects tests for
the fighting machines.
Timothy Hines excitedly says, "The fans of War of
the Worlds have no idea how phenomenal the alien technology
will be. We have astoundingly gifted designers and
artists working on this and most of them have been
envisioning Wells' fighting machines their whole lives."
The
look of the fighting machines and alien technology
is coming from both the computer world and the miniature
team, but being led by the miniature creations.
Miniature
effects supervisor Jon Sorensen, who contributed
to such films as Alien, Outland, and
The Dark Crystal, says, "We have to be careful
that the CG tail doesn't wag the Miniature dog. The
Aliens have been studying us. Our past. They would
pick things from various periods that scare us and
integrate them into their machines. They have constructed
these things for the sole purpose of invading Earth.
Nowhere else. These machines are custom built for
that purpose. Not as generalized war machines. They
have complicated pistons and highly detailed machinery."
Timothy Hines adds, "War of the Worlds is going to
feel as reality. Using miniatures and actual locations
will help to anchor this. Also, it's easier for the
actors when they can react to actual trucks being
dropped from cranes onto parked cars and full-scale
sections of the alien fighting machines whipping past
their heads as opposed to starring into a blank green
walls. H. G. Wells would be very pleased as to how
we are honoring his visions."
Casting
is still in progress as Timothy Hines insists on having
the best and the most natural actors possible to fill
out his production. "Ultimately the human element
is everything. We can have the biggest explosions
and most spectacular battle scene ever put on film
and it won't matter if you don't care about the people.
War of the Worlds is a lesson of arrogance and hubris.
How we react is far more important than the tactics
and strategies of our enemies," reflects Hines.
War
of the Worlds will go into theatrical release Halloween,
2002.